Shropshire Star

Special glasses could prevent motion sickness in self-driving cars

The University of Michigan has been granted a patent for eyewear to fight the problem.

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(Rui Vieira/PA)

Researchers could have solved the problem of motion sickness in self-driving cars.

A team from the University of Michigan has developed and patented a headset/eyewear system that can prevent motion sickness by displaying light in a wearer’s peripheral vision that mimics a car’s movement and can prevent sickness when looking down at a phone or book.

Motion sickness is caused by a disconnect between our sense of motion and what we can see – something the researchers say could increase with the rise of driverless cars, with more road users freed from keeping eyes on the road.

(Martyn Landi/PA)
Self-driving cars could increase motion sickness (Martyn Landi/PA)

The team, from the university’s Transportation Research Institute, said motion sickness stands in the way of the increased productivity self-driving vehicles were supposed to trigger.

Michael Sivak from the institute said: “This is more important with the introduction of autonomous vehicles.

“In autonomous cars, everyone will be a passenger. So you will have a larger potential pool of sick people. The protection that drivers have received from driving won’t be there any more.

“The productivity gains that the proponents of self-driving vehicles are talking about may not happen if we don’t address the motion sickness problem.”