Toyota Announces Self-Steering Pre-Collision System

Colum Wood
by Colum Wood

Pre-Collision Systems are a proven method of not only reducing accidents but of limiting the severity of injuries should a crash occur. Current systems like Volvo’s City Safety will apply brakes if an impact is inevitable.

Looking to rebrand itself as a safety leader, Toyota has just announced its own PCS that goes a step further, taking over control of the steering in order to avoid a collision. It works by using millimeter-wave radar, cameras and even infrared detection at night to detect vehicles and pedestrians, and when combined with a new Lane Departure Prevention system can “change the direction of the vehicle” to help avoid a collision.

Two other systems being developed simultaneously include an Adaptive Driving Beam system and a Pop-up Hood. A previous version switched high beams to low beams when it detected the taillights of a vehicle ahead or the headlights of an oncoming car. The latest advancement allows the high beams to stay on, but blocks a portion of the light that would interfere with the vision of oncoming traffic, allowing near high-beam visibility without blinding oncoming traffic. As for the pop-up hood, it is designed to reduce injuries in collisions with pedestrians.

Finally, in response to an aging population, Toyota has announced a new Emergency-response Technology, which allows the car to monitor the driver’s vital sign through touch points at the steering wheel, in order to detect a possible loss of consciousness due to “cardiovascular irregularity.” Still under development, Toyota aims to showcase this new technology at the Japan Medical Congress next April.

Colum Wood
Colum Wood

With AutoGuide from its launch, Colum previously acted as Editor-in-Chief of Modified Luxury & Exotics magazine where he became a certifiable car snob driving supercars like the Koenigsegg CCX and racing down the autobahn in anything over 500 hp. He has won numerous automotive journalism awards including the Best Video Journalism Award in 2014 and 2015 from the Automotive Journalists Association of Canada (AJAC). Colum founded Geared Content Studios, VerticalScope's in-house branded content division and works to find ways to integrate brands organically into content.

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