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Volvo’s camera monitoring tech aims to eliminate distracted and intoxicated driving

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Living up to its reputation as one of the safest automotive brands on the market,

Volvo

continues to develop people-first technology as it pushes toward a hopeful goal of a world without traffic fatalities. Although the target currently seems like an impossible achievement,

Volvo

has impressed time and time again with innovative features that make the roads safer. The newest tech takes aim at distracted and intoxicated driving through the use of in-car cameras, sensors and algorithms.

The announcement comes shortly after Volvo released information about a different safety feature, an imposed

speed cap

. Volvo said all cars from model year 2021 on will be limited to a top speed of 112 mph. Volvo identifies

speeding

, intoxicated driving and

distracted driving

as three of the biggest risks to address. Although the speed limiter is a relatively simple implementation, driver monitoring has many more variables and requires a complex identification and response system.

Driver monitoring is not a new idea, but it’s getting more involved. Some manufacturers already offer features that claim to identify when a driver is getting tired and can suggest they take breaks. Volvo is looking to advance this idea tenfold.

Dangerous behaviors

Using in-car cameras mounted to face the driver, sensors and complicated computer programming, the car would theoretically recognize erratic driving, whether that be due to distraction or intoxication. The car could notice this through what we’ll call “prompts,” such as a lack of steering input for a period of time, if the cameras notice the driver’s eyes are closed or looking off the road, if the car detects dangerous weaving, or if it identifies slow driver reaction times.

If the Volvo determines the driver is in danger, it would take action. After repeated warnings, the car would limit its speed, Volvo On Call assistance could be called, and as a last resort, the car would be slowed down and potentially stopped altogether.

For now, the technology is still in the developmental stages, but Volvo plans to introduce in-car cameras on all models “in the early 2020s.” Volvo did not address the issue of privacy in the press release, but we

previously reported

that Volvo plans to keep any footage anonymous and private. Besides, your laptop and phone cameras have been staring at you for years already.

from Autoblog https://ift.tt/2UOqPIS