New device to prevent hot car deaths detects heartbeats, breathing in backseat

Tuesday, June 14, 2022
PLANO, TX -- A dozen Toyota engineers have worked for the last 2.5 years to try and prevent another child from dying after being left in a hot car.

The National Safety Council reports that on average 38 children died every year in the United States from that exact scenario. Fixing that sad statistic is the top priority for this group of engineers.
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"It's become a mission as opposed to just a job," Simon Roberts said.

The new technology is called Cabin Awareness. It's designed to save lives and prevent heatstroke deaths inside cars, not just from babies left in car seats, but also animals forgotten in the back or who somehow got inside without the car owner's awareness.

Cabin Awareness, unlike some other available systems, does not use video cameras to keep an eye on the backseat or scales to know if something heavy remains in the seat. Instead, the system senses micro-movements--like heartbeats or breathing.

"So we are able to distinguish between a grocery bag and a human whereas a weight sensor can't do that," Roberts said.
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When Cabin Awareness realizes something living has been left in the car, it triggers a few alerts. First, your car horn and flashers go off. Then if that doesn't get your attention, you'll get a call or text from the system.



The system isn't officially ready to roll out to the public just yet, but engineers designing the system said they expect it to be in all cars very soon.

"Obviously we are developing this for Toyota and Lexus, but this is something potentially as what we are calling our Volvo moment. Where, they invented the three-point safety harness, the seatbelt that we all have today in every single vehicle. This is something that came out of the Hackathon as part of a social good and innovation movement that we would like to see adopted everywhere," Roberts said.
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