Magna Concursos

Mechanical engineers develop an “intelligent co-pilot” for cars

Semiautonomous system takes the wheel to keep drivers safe.

Jennifer Chu, MIT News Office

July 13, 2012

Barrels and cones dot an open field in Saline, Mich., forming an obstacle course for a modified vehicle. A driver remotely steers the vehicle through the course from a nearby location as a researcher looks on. Occasionally, the researcher instructs the driver to keep the wheel straight – a trajectory that appears to put the vehicle on a collision course with a barrel. Despite the driver’s actions, the vehicle steers itself around the obstacle, transitioning control back to the driver once the danger has passed.

The key to the maneuver is a new semiautonomous safety system developed by Sterling Anderson, a PhD student in MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Karl Lagnemma, a principal research scientist in MIT’s Robotic Mobility Group.

The system uses an onboard camera and laser rangefinder to identify hazards in a vehicle’s environment. The team devised an algorithm to analyze the data and identify safe zones – avoiding, for example, barrels in a field, or other cars on a roadway. The system allows a driver to control the vehicle, only taking the wheel when the driver is about to exit a safe zone.

Anderson, who has been testing the system in Michigan since last September, describes it as an “intelligent co-pilot” that monitors a driver’s performance and makes behind-the-scenes adjustments to keep the vehicle from colliding with obstacles, or within a safe region of the environment, such as a lane or open area.

“The real innovation is enabling the car to share (control) with you,” Anderson says. “If you want to drive, it’ll just… make sure you don’t hit anything.”

The group presented details of the safety system recently at the Intelligent Vehicles Symposium in Spain.

(http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/mechanical-engineers-develop-intelligent-car-co-pilot-0713.html – Com adaptações.)

Classify the statements as T (true) or F (false) and mark the alternative which has the right sequence.

( ) The “intelligent co-pilot” doesn’t allow drivers to keep a straight trajectory unless it’s safe.

( ) The system uses devices which identify risks and help drivers avoid them.

( ) Sterling Anderson invented the “intelligent co-pilot” by himself in the MIT’s Department of Mechanical Engineering.

( ) The algorithm developed by Anderson and Lagnemma can prevent the vehicle from colliding with objects, such as barrels or cars.

 

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