SYSTEM THAT WARNS IN ADVANCE OF OCCUPANTS EXITING OR ENTERING A PARKED VEHICLE
20190197900 ยท 2019-06-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
B60Q2400/40
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60Q1/324
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G08G1/166
PHYSICS
International classification
B60Q1/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system for protecting the safety of occupants exiting and entering a vehicle has sensors on the interior, exterior and remotely of the vehicle and one or more imaging devices that project an image onto the pavement supporting the vehicle as well as optional data input devices all communicating with a system controller. The system anticipates that the occupant will be leaving the vehicle and the time it will take for the occupant to fully exit the vehicle. The system further controls the imaging devices to warn the drivers of oncoming traffic of the occupant's egress and warn or block the egress of the occupant should a particularly dangerous condition exist.
Claims
1. A system that warns one or more drivers of an approaching vehicle in advance of one or more occupants that are about to enter or exit a parked vehicle, comprising: a controller within the parked vehicle; one or more sensors detecting an action of the one or more occupants of the parked vehicle that are performing normal preparations to exit or enter the parked vehicle, wherein the one or more sensors are in communication with the controller; and one or more imaging devices producing an image that is visible by the one or more drivers of the approaching vehicle, wherein the one or more imaging devices are in communication with the controller; the controller activates the one or more imaging devices before the one or more occupants opens a door of the parked vehicle at an activation time determined by a historical data of the occupant's routine in preparation for entering or exiting the parked vehicle as measured by the one or more sensors.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the one or more imaging devices projects a visible image on a surface for viewing by the one or more drivers of the approaching vehicles.
3. The system of claim 2, wherein the surface for viewing the image is the pavement for supporting the vehicles.
4. The system of claim 3, wherein one or more external inputs that communicate conditions influencing a optimum activation time of the one or more imaging devices.
5. The system of claim 4, wherein the one ore more external inputs communicates but is not limited to the speed of traffic passing the parked vehicle or distance between the parked vehicle and oncoming traffic or passing traffic.
6. The system of claim 5, wherein the one or more external inputs includes but is not limited to an ambient light level, a weather conditions, a road conditions, a road configuration or a pavement conditions.
7. The system of claim 6, wherein the controller adjusts the activation time of the imaging devices relative to the occupant's progress with preparing to exit or enter the parked vehicle depending on the one or more external inputs.
8. The system of claim 7, wherein the occupant sensor inputs include but are not limited to a weight, a height, an electronic, or another measure to identify the occupant.
9. The system of claim 8, wherein the occupant sensor inputs include but are not limited to a shift control position, an emergency brake, an ignition switch, a dome light, a visor mirror, a cigarette lighter, a rear view mirror position, a safety belt buckle, an inside door handle proximity, an inside door handle, a door position, a remote lock control, a door key lock and an outside door handle.
10. The system of claim 9, wherein the controller activates the door lock upon activating the one or more imaging devices and deactivates the door lock when conditions are safe for exiting or entering the parked vehicle.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the controller activates a sensory alarm inside of the parked vehicle communicating to the one or more occupants with a light, a sound or a vibration.
12. The system of claim 11, wherein the vehicle is but is not limited to the list: i. a personal, ii. a commercial, iii. a public service, iv. a defense; v. a construction, vi. an air travel, vii. a public transit, vii. a freight, viii. a water travel, ix. a rail transportation, x. a monorail, xi. a hovercraft, xii. people-movers, xiii. gondolas, xiv. lifts, and xv. recreational vehicles.
13. The system of claim 12, wherein the controller is a microprocessor.
14. The system of claim 13, wherein the image portrays a keep out area projected on the supporting pavement by the one or more imaging devices.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein the controller utilizes a learning algorithm to dynamically adjust a weighting factor assigned to each of the plurality of sensors based on a past behavior of the occupant.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the controller can actively change which imaging device is activated in real time.
17. The system of claim 18, wherein the controller can actively change the images that are projected in real time.
18. The system of claim 17, wherein the controller can change the image based on the vehicles environment and passenger activity.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein the controller includes an input device for communicating a custom image to the controller.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the external inputs are communicated wirelessly.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWING(S)
[0036]
[0037]
[0038]
[0039]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0040]
[0041]
[0042]
[0043] Alternatively, the present invention 100 could be activated by a sensor in the door key lock 122, a sensor of the outside door handle 123 or a proximity sensor (un-shown).
[0044]
[0045] The first category of devices in
[0046] The three remaining sensors of
[0047] The external inputs 220, from a host vehicle system source 221 to the controller 200, of
[0048] The remote source generated 230 information that could be gotten with satellite, cellular or direct wireless communication including GPS, 3G, 4G network, vehicle to vehicle or vehicle to land station systems can also supply weather 231, road configuration 232 (number of lanes, intersections Etc.), speed limit 233 and pavement condition 234, (wet, icy, pot holes, resurface milling Etc.) that again are considerations in providing for safe occupant entering or exiting the vehicle 101.
[0049] All or some of the aforementioned inputs in
[0050] The imaging device on the passenger side 243 also warns oncoming traffic of the impending opening of a door 105 and emergence of an occupant on the pavement 104. The door lock 244 and override control 245, allows the controller 200 to impede the occupant (un-shown) from opening the door and includes a way for the occupant to override the lock.
[0051]
[0052] Each time an occupant with recognized characteristics sits in the vehicle 101 and then exits the vehicle 101 their occupant statistical data is captured in a rolling memory 303 as each system input 200 is triggered. Occupant statistical data 303 consists of the time that passes between the triggering of any of the shift control in park 203, emergency brake 204, ignition switch 205, dome light 206, visor mirror light 207, cigarette lighter 208 rear view mirror 209 safety buckle 210, inside door handle proximity 211 or inside door handle 212 and the opening of the door sensed by the door position sensor 213. Once the data based on occupant experience with the vehicle inputs is taken it can be integrated with the data taken form vehicles of the same vehicle model using a weighted averaging 304 to select the sensor trip that is the best indicator of the time the occupant will exit the vehicle 305 and record this determination in the occupant profile 306 along with the average time between best sensor trip and the door opening 307.
EXAMPLE 1
[0053] The present invention may be in use in a MODEL X vehicle. The model X has a proximity sensor at the location of the door handle. However, the door handle of the MODEL X vehicle is close to the steering wheel and the proximity sensor of all MODEL X vehicles experience occasional inadvertent activations. The learning cycle data for a specific occupant in a specific MODEL X vehicle will be taken into account by giving the proximity sensor input a lower weight when selecting which sensor is the best predictor of the occupant exiting the vehicle 101.
[0054] The characteristics that distinguish the best indicator of the time the occupant will exit the vehicle are:
[0055] 1. An input trigger time of sufficient length so that the imaging devices can be turned on in enough time to warn oncoming traffic of the impending occupant exiting the vehicle.
[0056] 2. Enough extra time so that the warning of oncoming traffic can be moved foreword to compensate for fast oncoming traffic and poor driving conditions.
[0057] 3. A trigger input time that is repeatable.
[0058]
[0059] During the learning cycle steps 300 the controller 200 may use default times (un-shown) for performing the system operating cycle steps 320. After a set number of cycles through the learning cycle steps 300 with an occupant having an occupant profile (un-shown) the system will begin using the data from the occupant profile for operational timing during the system operating cycle steps 320. Concurrent operation of the system learning cycle steps 300 and the system operating steps 320 may be performed periodically to update the data in the operator's profile with current client practices while not interrupting the normal operation of the system.
[0060] Although the terms and definitions used in the specification are intended to be read into the claims they are hot intended to limit the meets and bounds of the claims presented here below in any manner.