Toyota Launches New Collaborative Safety Research Center in Ann Arbor,
Michigan
Press
Release
Industry-Wide Safety Projects to Focus on
Children, Teens and Seniors in Collaboration with Leading U.S.
Institutions
ANN ARBOR, Michigan - January
9, 2011 - Toyota announced today that it is launching a new, advanced
safety research center that will collaborate with leading North American
universities, hospitals, research institutions, federal agencies and
other organizations on projects aimed at reducing the number of traffic
fatalities and injuries on America's roads.
Toyota's new Collaborative Safety Research
Center (CSRC) will be based at the Toyota Technical Center (TTC) in Ann
Arbor, Michigan and will involve Toyota researchers and engineers from
North America and Japan. The new initiative builds on Toyota's
ongoing commitment to safety and quality leadership. The
company estimates that it will commit approximately $50 million over the
next five years to fund CSRC.
The
collaborative research will pursue integrated ways to enhance safety,
involving the vehicle, driver and traffic environment. Initial
areas of focus will include reducing the risk of driver distraction - a
growing cause of accidents - and helping to protect the most vulnerable
traffic populations, including children, teens and seniors.
These populations account for approximately 30% of U.S. traffic
fatalities.
In addition, CSRC will conduct
in-depth analyses of available accident and human behavior data to
support stakeholders' efforts to evaluate and speed deployment of active
safety systems.
Announcing the new safety
initiative, Toyota Motor Corporation President Akio Toyoda said,
"Toyota's new safety research center will work with leading North
American universities and other partners on safety projects that benefit
the entire industry. Our investment will support
collaborative research aiming to reduce driver distraction and increase
the safety of vehicles, drivers, passengers and
pedestrians."
Chuck Gulash, a Senior
Executive Engineer at the Toyota Technical Center, will serve as
Director of CSRC. He will report to Shigeki Terashi, who is a
managing officer of Toyota Motor Corporation and the president of
TTC.
"Toyota has always tried to take a
comprehensive approach to creating a safe, sustainable automotive
society through advanced vehicle safety technology, intelligent
transport systems and traffic safety education," Mr. Gulash
said. "We have a long history of working closely with North
American partners to achieve our safety objectives, and our new
collaborative research initiative will build on this tradition. We
intend to publish as much of the research as possible so that it is
available to federal agencies, the industry and
academia."
Charter Partners: University of
Michigan, Virginia Tech, The Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia
The University of Michigan, Virginia Tech and The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute will be charter
partners in the new Collaborative Safety Research Center.
Toyota will also reach out broadly to other universities, hospitals and
research institutions in North America to invite proposals for research
into advanced automotive safety.
Toyota is
supporting the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute
(UMTRI) on a multidisciplinary project to assess the potential benefits
of advanced safety systems in a systematic way, combining their
expertise in driver behavior, crash data analysis and driver
modeling.
"We at the U-M Transportation
Research Institute share Toyota's enthusiasm for maximizing the societal
benefits from leading-edge safety research, and will leverage this
generous support with the full range of our research laboratories and
databases," said UMTRI director Peter Sweatman. "This program will allow
leading safety researchers to collaborate on complex issues affecting
the most important elements in the automotive safety equation - the
drivers and passengers who are also our family, friends and
colleagues. With Toyota's continuing support, we will be able
to test and disseminate research findings more widely, and to seek a
more rapid rate of improvement."
Toyota's
collaboration with Virginia Tech involves research into the
effectiveness of an electronic coaching and monitoring system for newly
licensed teenage drivers to help reduce unsafe driving
behaviors. Toyota will have an active role in guiding this
"Driver Coach" project alongside partners including the National
Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) of the National
Institutes of Health.
"Given that newly
licensed teen drivers are three times more likely to be involved in a
fatal crash than their adult counterparts, Toyota's support of our
Driver Coach project is of utmost importance," said Dr. Tom Dingus,
Director of the Virginia Tech Transportation Institute, developer of the
Driver Coach system. "Based on our previous teen driving
research, we can now determine, with actual video, the kinds of
behaviors teens engage in while driving. The next step is to
educate the teens and their parents with feedback about unsafe, and
safe, driving behaviors with the ultimate goal of helping teens become
better drivers."
Toyota will join The
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Research Institute in a pilot study
to create America's first publicly available national crash surveillance
system focused on child vehicle occupants. Such a system will
be used to monitor trends in child passenger safety, assess the
performance of new safety technologies for children and serve as a
national resource to assist researchers, industry and policy-makers to
set the agenda for child passenger safety in the
U.S.
"Toyota's support is critical to allow
us to further advance efforts to broadly and accurately measure the
burden of motor vehicle crashes on children's health and well-being on a
national level," said Dennis Durbin, MD, MSCE, Co-Scientific Director
of the Center for Injury Research and Prevention at The Children's
Hospital.
Toyota Technical Center (TTC), a
division of Toyota Motor Engineering & Manufacturing, North
America, is the Research and Development arm of Toyota in North
America. TTC is responsible for engineering design, vehicle
development, safety and performance evaluation, regulatory affairs and
advanced technical research in North America for Toyota and Lexus
vehicles assembled or sold here. TTC has helped develop the
Avalon, Camry, Sienna, Solara, Tundra and Venza vehicles for the North
American market. For more information about Toyota, visit
www.toyota.com.
Media
Contacts:
Cindy Mahalak
Toyota Technical
Center
(734)
695-2061
Cynthia.Mahalak@tema.toyota.com
Bernie DeGroat
University of Michigan News
Service
(734)
647-1847
bernied@umich.edu
Sherri
Box
Virginia Tech, PR & Marketing
Manager
(540)
231-1549
sbox@vtti.vt.edu
Dana
Mortensen
The Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia
(267)
426-6092
mortensen@email.chop.edu
source:
http://pressroom.toyota.com/pr/tms/toyota-launches-new-collaborative-190251.aspx