Car Steered with Driver’s Eyes
Source: Christian Kielmann"> The vehicle is controlled solely by the eye movements of the driver.
Source: Christian Kielmann
Source: Christian Kielmann"> Cameras mounted on the helmet capture the eye movements of the driver, which are converted into control signals for the steering wheel.
Source: Christian Kielmann
Source: Christian Kielmann"> Raul Rojas is a professor of artificial intelligence in the Department of Computer Science at Freie Universität Berlin.
Source: Christian Kielmann
Source: Christian Kielmann"> In the AutoNOMOS project Prof. Rojas and his team are working on the further development of autonomous and semi-autonomous cars.
Source: Christian Kielmann
Source: Christian Kielmann"> Over 60 journalists from around the world attended the press screening.
Source: Christian Kielmann
Demonstration by Computer Scientists of Freie Universität at Former Tempelhof Airport
“Keep your eyes on the road!” – Today scientists at Freie Universität working under the computer science professor Raúl Rojas gave a completely new meaning to this standard rule for drivers: Using software they developed, they can steer a car with their eyes. Today on the site of the former Berlin Tempelhof Airport, the head of the project, Raul Rojas, and his team from the Artificial Intelligence Group demonstrated how they can steer the vehicle that is equipped with complex electronics just by eye. More than 60 journalists from around the world were there to watch. A video, photos, and other information can be viewed in the online magazine of Freie Universität, campus.leben.
Information about the Software: EyeDrive
The eyeDriver software is a prototype application for steering the research vehicle Spirit of Berlin using eye movements. The software was designed by computer scientists at Freie Universität Berlin in collaboration with the company, SMI (SensoMotoric Instruments). The eye movements of the driver are collected and converted into control signals for the steering wheel. The speed is controlled separately and is not included in eyeDriver. The software shows that you can drive a vehicle solely with eye movements.
The HED4 solution by SMI is used for detecting and tracking the eye movements. It is a converted bicycle helmet equipped with two cameras and an infrared LED, as well as a laptop computer with special software. One of the cameras is pointed to the front in the same direction as the person wearing the helmet (scene camera), while the other camera films one eye of the wearer (eye camera). The infrared light supports the eye camera and is pointed to the eye under observation. A transparent mirror that reflects only the infrared light is used to allow a reasonable viewing angle for the eye camera, without limiting the wearer’s ability to see.
After a brief calibration the software on the laptop of the HED4 is not only able to capture the position of the pupil in the eye camera, but can also calculate the position in the scene camera that the wearer is looking at. These coordinates in the image of the scene camera (viewing position) are transmitted via an ordinary LAN to the onboard computer in the Spirit of Berlin.
The eyeDriver software in the onboard computer in the Spirit of Berlin receives the viewing positions at regular intervals over the LAN in the vehicle and uses it to control the steering wheel. The driver can choose between two modes: “free ride” and “routing.”
In the “free ride” mode the viewing positions are linked directly with the steering wheel motor. That means that the x-coordinates of the viewing position are used to calculate the desired position of the steering wheel. The further the driver looks to the left or right, the further the steering wheel is turned in that direction. The speed of the vehicle is set in advance and kept constant, as long as the position of the gaze is recognized. In case it is not possible to detect which direction the driver is looking in, for example, if the driver’s eyes are closed, the vehicle brakes automatically.
In the “routing” mode, the Spirit of Berlin steers autonomously most of the time. Only where there is a fork in the road, or an intersection, the car stops and asks the driver to select the next route. This requires the wearer of the helmet to look to the left or right for three seconds. If the driver’s gaze lingers long enough in one direction, the eyeDriver software confirms acoustically that the choice has been accepted. The decision is communicated to the planner in the vehicle. Then the artificial intelligence in the Spirit of Berlin can plan the route accordingly and continue to run independently.
For more information :
www.fu-berlin.de/en/presse/fup/2010/fup_10_106/index.html,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0zbrySJVQ5A
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