澳门六合彩历史记录

Kettering Partners with Navistar to Make Buses Safer

澳门六合彩历史记录 students are working on ways to make school buses safer.

The team is in the fourth year of a five-year project with Navistar, an Illinois-based manufacturer of school buses and semi trucks. This year, the Kettering team is developing the automation of vehicle sensing behavior capabilities to classify human transient behavior to detect when a child and/or an article of a child鈥檚 clothing is pinched in the bus door, to automate passenger counting, and to detect bullying and other dangerous passenger situations.

Students are using artificial intelligence, algorithms, and models to develop a low-cost platform to take photos of the children and keep a count to report to the driver, ensuring the drivers don鈥檛 leave students on the bus when they park and leave the garage for the day. Other artificial intelligence-based software will detect if a child and/or their backpack or clothing is in the danger zone of getting pinched in the door.

So far, Navistar is pleased with the students鈥 work.

鈥淭his is thinking outside of the box,鈥 said Dr. Teik-Khoon Tan, Navistar Senior Technical Specialist. 鈥淲e need innovation, so our strategy is to partner with universities. Without it, we lack other innovative perspectives. Kettering students, the learning and growth are very high. I鈥檓 very impressed.鈥

He praised Electrical and Computer Engineering Professor Dr. Mehrdad Zadeh for his 鈥渉igh emotional quotient鈥 or ability to understand others鈥 emotions.

鈥淸Zadeh] listens, and [the students] can learn what our customer really needs,鈥 Tan said. 鈥淟isten to what our pain points are so we can be in a good marriage. This is a perfect marriage. I鈥檓 very glad.鈥

In the first three years of the partnership, students worked on autonomous sensors and video, segmentation and behavioral learning.

鈥淎ll of this is part of artificial intelligence, and now we鈥檙e getting into behavioral learning when you step into the bus. They will know who you are, when you鈥檙e bullying kids,鈥 Tan said, noting the system will know this behavior is inappropriate.

Instead of using computers, the team uses recycled cell phones to capture the data, which is a cost-efficient way to provide customers with the safety applications they need.听

鈥淭his is important for production because we don鈥檛 have to redevelop everything off the shelf,鈥 Tan said.听听

He and Noah Wilson, advanced technology engineer at Navistar, have been working with the team.

鈥淭he students are very bright and clearly hardworking,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淧retty much all of the work has been done by the students. We鈥檝e been in more of an advisory role.鈥

Amanuel Weldemichael 鈥23 has been working on the automatic passenger counter portion of the project.

鈥淚 am interested in [Advanced Driver Assistance Systems] ADAS and autonomous vehicle solutions,鈥 he said.

His biggest challenge has been using well-known models on edge devices for real-time applications.

Navistar and Kettering student

鈥淎ll of this is part of artificial intelligence, and now we鈥檙e getting into behavioral learning when you step into the bus. They will know who you are, when you鈥檙e bullying kids,鈥 Tan said, noting the system will know this behavior is inappropriate.

- Dr. Teik-Khoon Tan

Students with Navistar on bus safety