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AT&T Labs, Carnegie Mellon Investigating Steering Wheels With Haptic Feedback For Navigation

Posted March 27, 2012 8:17 AM

From Autoblog:

Any device or system that draws a driver's attention away from the road is inherently distracting, but some navigation systems are better than others. Now, AT&T Labs is said to be hard at work developing a steering wheel with haptic feedback that may allow more drivers to keep their eyes off of the center console screen. According to MIT's Technology Review, the system uses 20 small actuators to to create a pattern of vibrations in the wheel. When the wheel buzzes clockwise, the driver is meant to turn to the right, while counterclockwise vibrations suggest turning left. The company's research indicates that when the system is used with standard audio and visual cues, inattentiveness in younger drivers drops by around 3.1 percent.

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Re: AT&T Labs, Carnegie Mellon Investigating Steering Wheels With Haptic Feedback For Navigation

03/28/2012 6:08 AM

I have a hard time telling whether my inattentiveness is dropping 3 or 4 percent.

Seriously, I don't think vibrations in the wheel give you the information a display does. Many times the road forks in several directions, and you need a map display to indicate which fork to take.

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