Traffic engineers are quietly working on a radical idea: adding a white signal to the familiar red, yellow, and green. Instead of signaling drivers directly, the extra light would tell humans when to ...
Development of self-driving technology seems to have slowed down due to the complexity of navigating human-driven traffic. A new paper from the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers ...
Before we’re old enough to even see over the dashboard, we learn that green means go and red means stop. This internationally recognized traffic light color system is standard in most of the world.
As more self-driving cars enter roadways around the world, many aspects of driving could change forever. More electric vehicles (EVs) and autonomous vehicles (AV) are already leading engineers to ...
As of press time, Tesla and other automakers are making drastic efforts to design and manufacture vehicles with self-driving capabilities. Of course, their self-driving technologies are still far from ...
Your browser does not support the video element. Your browser does not support the video element. Someday, maybe, you'll be driving like usual, and you'll stop at a ...
What do you think of a fourth traffic light color being added to traffic signals for self-driving vehicles to help control traffic flow? I get that one day a bunch of connected autonomous cars may ...
You’ve stopped at red lights your entire driving life: red, yellow, green — simple. The next time you approach a pedestrian crossing, you might notice a shade of red that doesn’t look the same. It’s a ...
The first traffic light came into existence in the United States in the early 1900s. Called semaphore traffic lights, they had retractable arms — similar to railroad crossing arms — with the words ...
Someday, maybe, you'll be driving like usual, and you'll stop at a red light, as usual. You'll take the opportunity to sneak a peek at the car next to you, and the guy behind that wheel — if there's a ...