This open-access-book synthesizes a supportive developer checklist considering sustainable Team and agile Project Management in the challenge of Artificial Intelligence and limits of image recognition. The study bases on technical, ethical, and legal requirements with examples concerning autonomous vehicles. As the first of its kind, it analyzes all reported car accidents state wide (1.28 million) over a 10-year period. Integrating of highly sensitive international court rulings and growing consumer expectations make this book a helpful guide for product and team development from initial concept until market launch.
By:
Thomas Winkle
Imprint: Springer Vieweg
Country of Publication: Germany
Edition: 1st ed. 2022
Dimensions:
Height: 210mm,
Width: 148mm,
Weight: 384g
ISBN: 9783658342920
ISBN 10: 3658342927
Pages: 248
Publication Date: 04 May 2022
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
Introduction.- Findings From Traffic Accident Analysis.- Analysis Of Poor Visibility Real-World Test Scenarios.- Technical, Legal, And Economic Risks.- Qualitative Interviews With Developers.- Consulting Concept To Develop New Systems.- Summary And Discussion.- Summary And Discussion.
The author Thomas Winkle (Prof. Dr.-Ing., MBA Communication & Leadership) is a multiple author in best-selling Springer books such as “Autonomous Driving: Technical, Legal and Social Aspects” or the “Handbook of Driver Assistance Systems”. His work bases on three decades in sustainable team consulting as employee and researcher in the legal departments of three car manufacturers as well as a professor at IU International University and TU Munich. Thomas Winkle received the Volkswagen research award for his significant Human-Centered Design into the development of the Automatic Emergency Brake. He was responsible to prepare the ADAS Code of Practice. As consultant at international courts, he links Artificial Intelligence, Ethics, Sustainable Agile Management, Mindful Communication and Law using Autonomous Vehicles example definition requirements.