试题查看

首页 > 考博 > 试题查看
【分析解答题】

American and Japanese researchers are developing a smart car that will help drivers avoid accidents by predicting when they are about to make a dangerous move.

The smart car of the future will be able to tell if drivers are going to mm, change lanes, speed up, slow down or pass another car.
If the driver’s intended action could lead to an accident, the car will activate a warning system or override the move.
(111) "By shifting the emphasis of car safety away from design of the vehicle itself and looking more toward the driver’s behavior, the developers believe that they can start to build cars that adapt to suit people’s needs," New Scientist magazine saiD、
Alex Pentland of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology collaborated on the project withAndrew Lin who works for the Japanese carmaker Nissan.
(112) Tests of their smart car using a driving simulator have shown that it is 95 percent accurate in predicting a driver’s move 12 seconds in advance.
(113) The system is based on driving behavior which the researchers say can be divided into chains of sub-actions which include preparatory moves.
It monitors the driver’s behavior patterns to predict the next move.
"To make its predictions, Nissan’s smart car uses a computer and sensors on the steering wheel, accelerator and brake to monitor a person’s driving patterns. (114)
A、brief training session, in which the driver is asked to perform certain maneuvers, allows the system to calculate the probability of particular actions occurring in two-second time segments,"
the magazine saiD、
Lin has also done work on tracking eye movement to predict driving behavior. (115) He said the smart car could be adapted to monitor eye movement which could give even earlier predictions of when a driver is about to make a wrong move.
查看答案解析

参考答案:

正在加载...

答案解析

正在加载...

根据网考网移动考试中心的统计,该试题:

0%的考友选择了A选项

0%的考友选择了B选项

0%的考友选择了C选项

0%的考友选择了D选项

你可能感兴趣的试题

Humour,whichoughttogiverisetoonlythemostAmericanandJapaneseresearchersaredevelopEverysecondintheUnitedStatesalone,morethBritishcancerresearchershavefoundthatchiImagineaworldinwhichtherewassuddenlynoemMostpeoplewouldbe(71)bythehighqualityofm