November 27, 2024

No one actually fell asleep — What happens when you trigger a cars automated emergency stopping? Experiencing the sequence of events in a car programmed for automated emergency stopping.

Jim Resnick – Jan 20, 2024 10:00 am UTC EnlargeMercedes-Benz reader comments 163

Most car crashes begin and end in a few seconds. That’s plenty of time to get in a tiny micro-nap while driving. The famous asleep-at-the-wheel film scene in National Lampoon’s Vacation, where Clark Griswold goes off to slumberland for 72 seconds while piloting the Wagon Queen Family Truckster (a paragon of automotive virtue but lacking any advanced driver safety systems), might be a comical look at this prospect. But if Clark were in the real world, he and his family would likely have been injured or killedor they could have caused similar un-funny consequences for other motorists or pedestrians.

There’s plenty of real-world news on the topic right now. Early in 2023, the Automobile Association of America’s Foundation for Traffic Safety published a study estimating that 1621 percent of all fatal vehicle crashes reported to police involve drowsy driving.

With the road fatality numbers in the US hovering close to 38,000 over the past few years, that means between 6,080 and 7,980 road deaths are linked to drowsy drivers. Further research by the AAA’s Foundation finds that drivers likely under-report drowsiness in all car crashes. Nodding off while driving is as dangerous asand potentially more dangerous thandriving drunk. And while drunk-driving figures have decreased between 1991 and 2021, the opposite is true for drowsy driving. Nissan

Automakers have not been unaware of the problem, either. As long ago as 2007, manufacturers like Volvo began offering drowsiness-detection systems that monitored the driver, though in a simpler way than what’s seen in the leading systems of today. They sensed the velocities of inputs to steering, throttle, and brakes. Some even used a camera aimed at the driver to discern if drivers were becoming inattentive, including drooping their head or simply averting their view from the straight-ahead. Advertisement

These systems chime a warning and project a visual alert on the dashboard asking if the driver wants to take a break, often with the universal symbol for wakefulnessa coffee cupappearing in the instrument cluster. Many new cars today still have this feature. And to be sure, it was then, is now, and forever will be a beneficial and effective method of alerting drivers to their drowsiness.

But a level beyond the above audible and visual cues has changed this landscape of blunting the upward trend of drowsy driving. As Level-2, semi-autonomous capabilities emerge in medium- and even lower-priced automobiles, these features also allow cars and SUVs to take control of the vehicle should the vehicle determine that the driver has become inattentive or incapacitated. Enlarge / On some vehicles, like this Mercedes, you can select the sensitivity of the drowsy driver program (Attention Assist in this case) to have a lower or higher threshold for activation. Jim Resnick

Because all the pieces of a vehicle-control puzzle are already on board, enabling a system to take over from an inattentive driver is a matter of programmingextensive programming, of course, but all the critical pieces of hardware are often already there: Selective braking from adaptive cruise control and stability control Self-steering functions of lane-keeping and lane-centering A cellular telematics network.

It’s a lengthy programming exercise that can take control of a vehicle in a simplified way, but not before three forms of human stimuli are triggered to wake up a drowsy driver: sight, sound, and a physical prompt.

This is all great in theory and in a digital vacuum, but I wanted to explore what occurs inside a car that has determined that the driver is no longer actually driving. The Infiniti QX60 and Mercedes EQE 350 have such emergency stop capabilities; I recently tested both. Page: 1 2 3 4 Next → reader comments 163 Jim Resnick A veteran of journalism, product planning and communications in the automotive and music space, Jim reports, critiques and lectures on autos, music and culture. Advertisement Promoted Comments maxintosh My Volkswagen does the following during "emergency assist" (tested up until it stopped completely on an empty highway at night) if you don’t make any steering inputs for too long of a period:
In enhanced ACC (Travel Assist) mode, "Take over steering!" message appears in cluster (or "drive in center of lane!" if it has had to nudge you back into the lane twice in a row) A few seconds later, that message turns red and it starts a "ding ding ding" sound After several more seconds, the beeps get louder and more urgent (beeeeeee! beeeeeee!) The brakes quickly jolt HARD twice in a row to try to wake you up/get your attention (this was the most attention-grabbing part) The car continues to follow any lane markings, puts on the hazard lights, and slows to a stop The car calls emergency services Edit: it also reminds you to take a rest break every two hours which is nice.

Edit: EBS first makes a loud alert and visual indicator before applying the brakes. It has beaten me to the punch once or twice and what I appreciate about it is even if it doesn’t automatically brake for you it increases the braking pressure when you do hit the pedal. Fortunately no phantom activations to date. January 20, 2024 at 3:22 pm Channel Ars Technica ← Previous story Next story → Related Stories Today on Ars