Skip to the main content

Editorial

https://doi.org/10.7906/indecs.21.4.4

Managing Negative Emotions Caused by Self-Driving

Dalma Zilahy ; Óbuda University – Doctoral School of Safety and Security Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
Gyula Mester ; Óbuda University – Doctoral School of Safety and Security Sciences, Budapest, Hungary


Full text: english pdf 208 Kb

page 351-355

downloads: 234

cite


Abstract

Reducing the negative emotions experienced in Self-Driving cars is key to increasing the number of users. To reduce anxiety, AI-based systems that measure the physiological response of passengers, mainly using biometric data, are used. In the future, the vehicle must be sufficiently emptical to reduce people’s distrust. The potential for hacking is still one of the main sources of anxiety about Self-Driving cars. To live with this difficulty, users need to be confronted with what machine learning means and accept that, contrary to expectations, Self-Driving cars cannot yet be 4 or 5 times safer than manual driving. To achieve the greater good – energy savings and lower emissions, efficient transport networks, greater use of digital infrastructure, safer and more usable public spaces, etc. – we need to be patient with Self-Driving vehicles.

Keywords

self-driving cars; acceptance; trust; hacking

Hrčak ID:

307528

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/307528

Publication date:

30.8.2023.

Visits: 708 *