So, you’re cruising down the highway in your shiny new car, the sun glinting off […] ...
According to an engineering psychology expert, autonomous car drivers have come to face a vigilance task, raising questions on the convenience of self-driving cars.
Cars with self-driving features are supposed to promise a safer and more convenient future. But there's a problem: human brains weren't designed for the strange new role these vehicles demand of us.
Self-driving cars promise safety, but new research shows human attention limits create hidden risks for everyday drivers.
While there are no autonomous vehicles available for sale in the United States, Detroit automakers have been advancing their assistance systems for years. Though the challenges and setbacks have been ...
While there are no autonomous vehicles available for sale in the United States, Detroit automakers have been advancing their assistance systems for years. Though the challenges and setbacks have been ...
Only one new vehicle in the U.S. uses a steer-by-wire system thus far. The steering system is gaining popularity internationally and could become much more common in the future. Cars are evolving ...
I’m driving a press car right now with no rear window and a giant touchscreen for its controls. It sucks. I do not like it.
It’s not your imagination — cars really are getting more complicated. It’s easy enough to see how the digital tendrils that have ensnared our attention in modern vehicles have created additional hoops ...
Start-stop is a relatively small feature with a dense engineering stack behind it. Modern systems tie together the engine control unit, starter-alternator hardware, beefed-up 12-volt or ...