TECHKNOW
98 TOPCAR.CO.ZA|January 20 16
DrThomas Müller, vicepresidentfor el ectrics,
electronics and e-propulsion, Volvo, holder of a
PhD in nuclear physics, gazes into his cr ystal ba ll
The next big things
by Volvo’s e-tech guru
CONNECTIVITY ISTHEkey to autonomous driving.
From a Hu man Machine Interface (HMI) perspective
it’s clear you need a safe and intuitive method of
bringing the driver in and out of the controlloop. In
the near future we will not see cars without steering
wheels, and people gazing out of the window. You will see
autonomous driving on some roads, so how do we do the handov er?
If you’re going to allow people to read or browse the internet, maybe
it’s via a programmable cockpit. So the car is in controland you’re
checking your emails on the display. Three kilometres ahead of the
handov er there’s a notification. With 30seconds to gothe emails fade
out and the driving instruments return.
>INTHEfuture there will be a great need for data exchange
between multip le vehicles. You can
buy static information from the
mapping companies, and the cars
will have sensors, but they will also
need real-time dynamic data about
what is happening on the electronic
horizon. They need to be able to
pred ict and to modify their driving
ahead of time, as a good driver does.
This collaboration between different
vehicles won’t be easy – we are all
competitors. Finding the right model
for anonymous data exchange is key.
>OUR CLOUDtechnology will
improve the user experience. There’s
potential for over-the-air active
safety. If somewhere there is an
emer gency-braking situation, or grip
is low, why not communicate that to
the cloud and on toother cars in the
area? Information from the cloud
will also pre-condition a plug-in
hybrid electric car in the right way to
better deploy its available ener gy, using ge o-fencing on zero-
emission zones for example, so the car knows to pres erve charge
and to sh ut off the combustion engine.
>HMI TOOKa big step when Apple intr oduced the iPhone. iDrive
was the automotive equivalent of computers’ mouse and menu
system. It worked beca use people understood the logic from their
computers. Now consumers have learned touchscreen interaction
from their smartphone. A touchscreen gives you two dimensi ons for
controland moreflexibility. The menustructure is much flatter too,
moreintuitive. The next stage is proximity sensing. In navigation
the screen would show only the map, bringing in the menuand
making the relevant part of it bigger as you reach for it, improving
accuracy.
>PEOPLETALKabout a future ba ttery electric car [Volvo will
launch a mid-si ze BEV with a 520km range by 2019] and everybody
talks ab out inductive [wireless] charging. The vision for this
technology is very desirable, certainly in the premium segment. You
arrive at your garage and step out, th e car positions itself perfectly
over the charging coil and that’s it, you’re charging, maybe while
also downloading a software update. It’s possi ble but there are cost
and safety issues. What if the car is charging and your cat walks
between the car and the charger? It’s a very unfortunate situation!
INTERVIEW BYBENMILLER
THOMAS
MÜLLER
What’sthe big idea?
Kirobo is anexperi ment in
human/robot interaction,
featuring voice and facial
recogniti on software
developed by Toyota. He
actually star ted life as a
robot astronaut, and was
sent to the international
space station to cheer
up Japanese station
commander Koichi Wakata.
Now he’s planning to try
to cheeryou up too, while
you’re stuck in traffic.
Why doesToyotathink
weneedcheeringup?
You’re driving a Toyota,
for a star t. More cr ucially,
studie s have shown that
drivers in a bad mood drive
too fast, too clos e to the
car in front and have more
accidents.
HowdoesKirobo plan
toovercomethat?He
has a facial recogniti on
camera just above one
of hi s eyes, and can
identify expressions, so
if you’re fr owning he’ll try
to engageyou in a bit of
helium-voiced chat. He
can understan d speech (as
long as you’re Japanese)
and has a databaseof
phrases.
So, will Kirobo be
standardonthe next
Auris?Sadly not, but
he’s part of a seri ous
experi ment to te st how your
car could interact wi th you.
He may be able to interact
with your sat-nav and
music too. If you haven’t
already hurled him out of
the window, that is.
FRESHTHINKING:Toyota’sin-carrobot
Meet Kirobo. He lives in your cupholder
Kirobostartedlife
inspace. It may
notbethe last
flighthetakes