Currently reading: Jaguar Land Rover gives driverless pods 'eyes' to signal road users

Virtual eyes make 'eye contact' with pedestrians to let them know it is safe to cross, with pedestrian behaviour monitored

Jaguar Land Rover’s future mobility division has installed 'eyes' on driverless pods in a new set of research into people’s behaviour around self-driving cars. 

The eyes, which are not sensors but a visual representation of the car’s awareness of obstacles, fix upon the pedestrian and signal when it is safe for them to cross

The study aims to find out if the eyes make people confident enough to walk out in front of the pod, rather than fearing the pod's sensors would fail to spot them and put them at risk.

Cognitive psychologists will analyse people’s behaviour at the side of the road before and after the eyes of the pedestrian and the pod meet. It’s part of the government-supported UK Autodrive project, with which several mainstream manufacturers are associated.

Studies cited by JLR suggest that up to 63% of pedestrians and cyclists would feel less safe with self-driving vehicles on the road. “It’s second nature to glance at the driver of the approaching vehicle before stepping into the road. Understanding how this translates in tomorrow’s more automated world is important,” said Pete Bennett, future mobility research manager at JLR.

“We want to know if it is beneficial to provide humans with information about a vehicle’s intentions or whether simply letting a pedestrian know it has been recognised is enough to improve confidence.”

By replicating human behaviour and elements of body language that pedestrians can relate to in the cars, JLR hopes that the project can improve the public’s trust in autonomous vehicles, since trust is seen as one of the technology’s main obstacles to overcome. 

Other schemes of this type have suggested text panels on the front of cars or 'facial expressions' to display messages to other road users about the car’s intentions, while one company proposed a more divisive emoji display

Volkswagen’s Sedric driverless pod concept also had cartoon-style eyes, although these are two-dimensional and incapable of making direct 'eye contact' with other road users. 

Read more: 

Autonomous cars with emoji displays in the pipeline

The autonomous car that smiles at pedestrians

UK’s largest autonomous car trial moves onto public roads

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

Could Jaguar's transition into an all-electric brand force one of its less commercially successful models into retirement too early?

Join our WhatsApp community and be the first to read about the latest news and reviews wowing the car world. Our community is the best, easiest and most direct place to tap into the minds of Autocar, and if you join you’ll also be treated to unique WhatsApp content. You can leave at any time after joining - check our full privacy policy here.

Join the debate

Comments
7
Add a comment…
Harry P 28 August 2018

Un-gentlemanly behaviour

“Virtual eyes make contact...with pedestrian behaviour Monitored”

And should the Jaguar owner be a bit of a Cad, will there be an option for an automated wolf-whistle if the eyes appreciate what they are monitoring!!  

tomy90 28 August 2018

What about multiple pedestrians?

What does it do if there is multiple pedestrians from opposite directions?

I am presuming it goes all cross eyed

androo 28 August 2018

Needs more

Never mind big eyes, how about a giant wagging finger and a celeb voice that shouts at people who walk across the road while talking on their phone? The roads are going to look like Disney's Cars brought to life.