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Honda's future autonomous cars may be just like KITT

2017 Honda Accord Hybrid
Image used with permission by copyright holder
When you climb into your fancy self-driving car sometime in the future, your passenger may be the offspring of Pepper and Asimo, two of the best known and most capable modern robots. SoftBank, the company that produces Pepper, has teamed up with Honda, makers of the Asimo robot, to work on artificial intelligence for use in cars.

Honda is about to open a research laboratory concentrating on AI, while SoftBank’s robotics division Cocoro will help Honda give its software some personality, and infuse it with the ability to empathize and form friendships. If that sounds familiar, it’s because that’s an evolution of Pepper’s party trick of reading human emotions.

While a physical robot may not be Honda’s plan for your companion inside the self-driving model of the future, it may be something like KITT from the classic 80s television show Knight Rider. The two companies will collaborate on software and hardware, using sensors and cameras to understand situations and surroundings, while the software chats and interacts with the driver. The emotive and natural conversations that Pepper is capable of holding give us a glimpse of what the future may hold for self-driving cars.

SoftBank co-founder Masayoshi Son told people at a Tokyo event to imagine how it would be if, “robots devoted themselves to humans,” and continued, “Imagine that cars themselves became supercomputers or robots one day. Honda will be the first to adopt this technology.”

Just as we’re beginning to get used to voice control through software like Siri, and hardware like Amazon’s Alexa; asking a car to perform certain functions, or assess situations, makes sense in an autonomous car. If we’ve no real need to control the vehicle, why would we want to start messing around with the stereo, air-conditioning, or GPS instead? Much easier to ask a friendly robot to help out. It’s also technology that would benefit drivers today, ensuring we keep our eyes on the road and hands on the wheel. We’ve already seen examples too, such as the IBM Watson-powered Olli vehicle.

SoftBank and Honda’s partnership announcement comes soon after ARM Holdings was acquired by SoftBank in a mega $32 billion deal. ARM Holdings is best known for its chip technology, and is heavily involved with the Internet of Things, of which connected and autonomous cars plays a big part.

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Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
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