Case Study
Thursday, June 27
03:30 PM - 04:00 PM
Live in Berlin
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This presentation delves into the realm of car sickness within the context of autonomous vehicles (AVs). With the increasing adoption of self-driving cars, understanding and addressing passenger discomfort due to motion sickness is paramount. Leveraging in-car cameras, infrared, and thermography technologies, TNO’s team explores innovative methods to monitor occupants’ physiological responses and driver states. Through the fusion of conventional and infrared imagery, coupled with deep learning techniques, real-time assessment of passengers’ discomfort levels can be achieved. Several technological and methodological challenges that currently still prevent application in real car driving will be discussed. If solved, that would also open up possibilities to extend this kind of in-cabin sensing to, e.g., the generic concept of driver state monitoring.
With an MSc in physics and a PhD in medicine, Jelte is a researcher in the Department of Human Performance in Soesterberg by TNO, a Dutch not-for-profit applied scientific research organization. In addition to that, he holds a chair in Vestibular Motion and Attitude Perception as an endowed professor at the Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences of the Vrije Universiteit in Amsterdam. His professional interests concern the effects of physical and visual self-motion on safety, health, performance and well-being, with a special interest in understanding and modelling self-motion perception and motion sickness.