WORLD'S
FIRST MOTOR VEHICLE 'BLACK BOX' STANDARD UNDERWAY AT IEEE
Industry
and Government Experts Join to Standardize
Event Data Recorders for Highway Crash Data
Contact:
Tom Kowalick
(910) 692-5209, mvedr@ieee.org
or
Edward Rashba
(732) 465-6449, e.rashba@ieee.org
or
Karen McCabe
(732)562-3824, k.mccabe@ieee.org
For Release:
Immediate
(PISCATAWAY,
NJ, 13 April 2002) Driven by the lack of uniform
scientific crash data needed to make vehicle and highway transportation
safer and reduce fatalities, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers Standards Association (IEEE-SA) has begun working to
create the first universal standard for motor vehicle event data
recorders (MVEDR) much like those that monitor crashes on aircraft.
According
to National Safety Council statistics, motor vehicle crashes are
the leading cause of death between the ages of one and 33 in the
U.S.. There is a death caused by a motor vehicle crash every 12
minutes and a disabling injury every 14 seconds. These crashes,
and the injuries and fatalities they cause, are the nation's largest
public health problem. Since the first road crash fatality in
1896, motor vehicles have claimed an estimated 30 million lives
globally. On average, someone dies in a motor vehicle crash each
minute worldwide.
The IEEE standards
project, IEEE P1616 "Motor Vehicle Event Data Recorders,"
brings together industry and government experts to formulate a
minimum performance protocol for the use of onboard tamper and
crash-proof memory devices for all types and classes of highway
and roadway vehicles. This international standard will help manufacturers
develop devices the public commonly refers to as "black boxes"
for autos, trucks, buses, ambulances, fire trucks and other vehicles.
The MVEDR
standard will define what data should be captured, including date,
time, location, velocity, heading, number of occupants and seat
belt usage. It will also define how that information should be
obtained, recorded and transmitted.
"The
more accurate the data we gather on highway crashes, the better
chance we have to reduce the devastating effects of crashes,"
says Jim Hall, co-chair of the IEEE P1616 Working Group and former
head of the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB).
"That's
why it's so important to have recorders that objectively track
what goes on in vehicles before and during a crash to complement
the subjective input we now get from victims, eye witnesses and
police reports. The NTSB considers this so important that it features
'automatic crash sensing and recording devices' high on its current
list of
the 'Most Wanted' transportation safety improvements."
The IEEE P1616
project builds on more than a decade of ongoing MVEDR research
and development. Major studies in this field have been or are
being done by the Department of Transportation (USDOT), the National
Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA), the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCA), the Federal Highway
Works Administration (FHWA), the Transportation Research Board
(TRB), the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), and many of the
world's automotive, truck and bus manufacturers.
"This
research has taught us to appreciate the significance of MVEDRs,"
says Tom Kowalick, co-chair of the IEEE P1616 Working Group and
professor at Sandhills Community College in Pinehurst, N.C. "In
providing essential crash information, these devices can help
accelerate the deployment of emerging safety technologies, such
as collision avoidance systems, driver-assisted technologies,
onboard vehicle diagnostic systems and advanced medical response
capabilities. The next step is to build what we've learned so
far into a series of global standards that fills a gap in our
overall transportation system."
Kowalick notes
that highway vehicles are the only major mode of transportation
in the U.S., which also includes air, rail, marine and pipeline
transport, without an adequate event data recorder standard. IEEE
P1616aims to rectify this.
"The
IEEE is the logical group to lead this effort," says Kowalick.
"Since the use of electronic components in motor vehicles
has grown dramatically in the last decade, the challenge lies
in integrating communication and information technology to improve
transportation safety. The IEEE is well positioned to take the
lead in bringing these areas together, especially through its
37 technical societies."
"For
instance, the IEEE Vehicular Technology Society is sponsoring
the MVEDR standard and recently completed a similar effort along
with other IEEE Societies for a rail event data recorder standard
(IEEE Std 1482.1). The IEEE is also playing a major role in developing
standards for Intelligent Transportation Systems."
IEEE P1616
has attracted interest and participation from a diverse range
of public and private sector organizations and individual IEEE
volunteers. These include NHTSA, TRB, FHWA, NTSB, the American
Public Transportation Association, the American Automobile Association,
the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers (which represents 13
automakers), Transport Canada, Booz Allen Hamilton, General Motors,
Honda and Visteon.
IEEE-SA Working
Groups often contain volunteers from industry, government, academia
and trade, scientific and IEEE organizations. Anyone with expertise
in automotive electronics, embedded systems, telematics, global
positioning systems, solid state recorder technology and automotive
software is invited to help develop the IEEE P1616 series of standards.
Information on this Working Group and its activities is available
online at: http://grouper.ieee.org/groups/1616/home.htm.
About the
IEEE Standards Association
The IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA), a globally recognized
standards-setting body, develops consensus standards through an
open process that brings diverse parts of an industry together.
These standards set specifications and procedures to ensure that
products and services are fit for their purpose and perform as
intended. The IEEE-SA has a portfolio of more than 870 completed
standards and more than 400 in development. Over 15,000 IEEE members
worldwide belong to IEEE-SA and voluntarily participate in standards
activities. For further information on IEEE-SA see: http://standards.ieee.org/.
About the
IEEE
The IEEE has more than 375,000 members in approximately 150 countries.
Through its members, the organization is a leading authority on
areas ranging from aerospace, computers and telecommunications
to biomedicine, electric power and consumer electronics. The IEEE
produces nearly 30 percent of the world's literature in the electrical
and electronics engineering, computing and control technology
fields. This nonprofit organization also sponsors or cosponsors
more than 300 technical conferences each year. Additional information
about the IEEE can be found at http://www.ieee.org/.
# # #
|