Until self-driving cars get a lot better, the only AI controlling them will be us. Since we're imperfect, sleepy beings, however, Panasonic is using artificial intelligence in a different way: To detect when we're drowsy and pull us back from dreamland. There's a surprising amount of tech to that, including an infrared sensor, environment sensor, facial capture camera and "thermal sensation" system that activates the car's AC or alarms if all else fails.
Panasonic came up with five different levels of potential drowsiness: not drowsy at all, slightly drowsy, drowsy, very drowsy and seriously drowsy (their terms). The system aims to figure out exactly where you are on that scale and take the appropriate measures.
[...] Unlike other systems, it works silently in the background so that drivers don't even notice they're being monitored. Rather, you'll (hopefully) just feel generally more awake during the trip, unless you try to pull off a 20-hour all-night trip. In that case, it'll rightfully tell you to pull the hell over so you don't endanger yourself and others. Panasonic plans to make their system available to automakers by October, and it might come to your favorite car model sometime after that
Source: https://www.engadget.com/2017/08/01/panasonic-drowsy-driver-ai-infrared/
(Score: 2) by LoRdTAW on Wednesday August 02 2017, @12:34PM
That doesn't sound like AI. That sounds like a state machine based on fuzzy logic (remember when it was all the rage around the late 90's?).
Sounds like someone's Raspberry pi project on hackaday: pi camera -> OpenCV -> state machine -> Air conditioner.
Thats...creepy. We all know what that might mean once the cars get connected to the internet.