Robots and self-driving cars could soon benefit from a new kind of brain-inspired hardware that can allegedly detect movement ...
Cars with self-driving features are supposed to promise a safer and more convenient future. But there's a problem: human brains weren't designed for the strange new role these vehicles demand of us.
According to an engineering psychology expert, autonomous car drivers have come to face a vigilance task, raising questions on the convenience of self-driving cars.
Self-driving car companies (like Waymo) are already operating robotaxi fleets in major cities such as Phoenix, San Francisco and LA. Meanwhile, in the U.K., the Automated Vehicles Act came into law ...
The advent of self-driving cars promises a future where transportation is more efficient and less reliant on human input. Yet, despite the technological advancements, significant safety concerns ...
Self-driving cars did not disappear. They simply slipped out of the spotlight. While attention shifted to generative AI, ...
The rideshare company is getting into the business of providing real-world driving data to autonomous vehicle developers. Here's why.