It’s Careers in Construction Month, our chance to tell everybody why construction work is a great career choice. Our industry offers job stability, room to grow in the trade, and a place to do work that makes our society better.
[Read more…]Our Back to School Assignment: How to Make 104 Equal 0
You could say the data isn’t all that bad. You could say that the 15,000 school bus-involved accidents, 104 of them fatal, in the 2022-23 school year represented a tiny percentage of the 21 million students who boarded school buses every day and traveled millions of miles.
[Read more…]Innovators Are Helping Self-Driving Cars by Improving Their ‘Vision’
Self-driving cars may be our future, but for now, human drivers do some important things better.
Like seeing what’s not clearly visible. An experienced human driver can extrapolate the location of lane markers, medians, and stop bars — even when the markers are faded, covered by snow, or obscured by fog or sun glare. Most of us do this without knowing we’re doing it.
Computer-drivers aren’t good at extrapolating. They look for absolutes. If you’ve tried an autonomous car, you may have felt the engine hesitating as the computer-driver interpreted unclear road markings. You can almost feel the car thinking for a few seconds before it figures out what to do and does it.
Researchers are trying to help. Engineers at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory have teamed up with Western Michigan University to develop a new kind of micro transmitter — one that can be embedded inside pavement markers.
From inside the pavement markers, these transmitters communicate with self-driving cars as they travel along the roadway above. With data from these transmitters worked into their navigational equations, computer-drivers can ”see“ pavement markers even when they’re not visible on the car’s cameras — much like a skilled human driver can.
The engineers who developed this technology tested it and reported their findings in a technical paper. According to their data, embedded chips in pavement markers reduced the processing power computer-drivers assigned for navigation. In some driving conditions, the micro transmitters reduced processing power by 90 percent.
In human terms, this means the computer-drivers didn’t have to turn down the radio and tell everyone else in the car to be quiet so they could better focus on the road.
We’re intrigued by this new technology. It exists at the intersection of safety, quality work, and innovation — qualities we focus on every day. Our InfraStripe family of companies already excels at creating clear and easy-to-understand pavement markers. Our work already makes roads safer for human drivers and computer drivers alike.
Innovations like embedding microchips in pavement markers adds another layer of safety as more autonomous cars merge onto our nation’s roadways. We’ll be paying close attention to these kinds of innovations as we embrace the safety needs of tomorrow.
How Do You Improve Safety? By Shifting Safety Culture
Did you know that smoking cigarettes used to be considered safe? In fact, smoking was deemed good for your health. So said “doctors in all parts of the country” [Read more…]
Generative AI: It Can’t Hold a Shovel But it Could Help Build Roads
If you’ve scrolled headlines lately you’ve probably seen something about artificial intelligence, or AI. Depending on what you read, AI will either destroy us all or turn the world into a perfect place. And, according to some articles, it’ll do one or the other by 2030.
[Read more…]Why Does Road Work Take So Long?
Drive through the same highway work zone enough times and it might start to feel like a permanent part of your life — maybe even like an old friend.
[Read more…]In Our Temporary Work Zones, Actions Have Permanent Results
Work zones are temporary. But our actions inside work zones can last forever.
That’s the message our industry will share with this year’s National Work Zone Awareness Week April 15-19. This message reminds drivers their actions — such as speeding or driving while distracted — in work zones can cause life-changing injuries or even fatalities.
[Read more…]Car Crashes are Down Again: Let’s Find Out Why
They say numbers never lie. But that doesn’t mean the truth is always simple.
[Read more…]From Janitor to Inventor, Frederick McKinley Jones Changed Transportation
Innovation drives the transportation industry. It always has. But our engine of innovation hasn’t always driven on all cylinders. For example, our national history of racial segregation stopped many 20th century African-American inventors from shaping our industry.
That’s one reason Black History Month, each February, is so important. This special month gives our industry a way to celebrate African-American inventors who broke through society’s barriers and contributed to our industry.
[Read more…]Complete Streets are Safer Streets
How do you define “traffic?” If you’re like most Americans, you picture taillights, turn signals, and exit-only lanes. This is understandable. In the 20th century, planners built or redesigned almost all of our roads, streets, and bridges with pavement markings to serve motorized vehicles.
21st century planners have been busy reimagining our roads and streets. It’s part of the “Complete Streets” movement, and it focuses on making our roads safer for motorized vehicles along with other forms of travel, including bicycling and walking.
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