Connected Car: Quantified Self becomes Quantified Car

The automotive industry could be facing a situation of profound change and opportunity in the coming decades. There are a number of influencing factors such as increasing urban and aging populations, self-driving cars, 3D parts printing, energy innovation, and new models of transportation service delivery (Zipcar, Uber). The connected car means that vehicles are now part of the connected world, continuously Internet-connected, generating and transmitting data, which on the one hand can be helpfully integrated into applications, like real-time traffic alerts broadcast to smartwatches, but also raises security and privacy concerns. This paper explores the automotive connected world, and describes five killer QS (Quantified Self)-auto sensor applications that link quantified-self sensors (sensors that measure the personal biometrics of individuals like heart rate) and automotive sensors (sensors that measure driver and passenger biometrics or quantitative automotive performance metrics like speed and braking activity). The applications are fatigue detection, real-time assistance for parking and accidents, anger management and stress reduction, keyless authentication and digital identity verification, and DIY diagnostics. These kinds of applications help to demonstrate the benefit of connected world data streams in the automotive industry and beyond where, more fundamentally for human progress, the automation of both physical and now cognitive tasks is underway.

[1]  Minjae Lee,et al.  RNA design rules from a massive open laboratory , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[2]  Daniel McDuff,et al.  AutoEmotive: bringing empathy to the driving experience to manage stress , 2014, DIS Companion '14.

[3]  Susannah Fox,et al.  Mobile health 2012 , 2012 .

[4]  Steve Omohundro,et al.  Cryptocurrencies, smart contracts, and artificial intelligence , 2014, SIGAI.

[5]  Melanie Swan,et al.  Sensor Mania! The Internet of Things, Wearable Computing, Objective Metrics, and the Quantified Self 2.0 , 2012, J. Sens. Actuator Networks.

[6]  Melanie Swan,et al.  The Quantified Self: Fundamental Disruption in Big Data Science and Biological Discovery , 2013, Big Data.

[7]  M. Swan Health 2050: The Realization of Personalized Medicine through Crowdsourcing, the Quantified Self, and the Participatory Biocitizen , 2012, Journal of personalized medicine.

[8]  Jaron Lanier,et al.  Who Owns the Future , 2013 .

[9]  Melanie Swan,et al.  Blockchain: Blueprint for a New Economy , 2015 .

[10]  H. Viswanathan,et al.  THE FUTURE of THE INTERNET of THINGS , 2016 .

[11]  Helen Sutherland,et al.  The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents , 1950 .

[12]  D. Shoup Cruising for Parking , 2006 .

[13]  M. Swan Emerging Patient-Driven Health Care Models: An Examination of Health Social Networks, Consumer Personalized Medicine and Quantified Self-Tracking , 2009, International journal of environmental research and public health.