upper waypoint

New Inter-Disciplinary Program at Stanford Looks at Car From All Angles

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Photo: Kelly Wilkinson, KQED

Cars and academia may seem like an unlikely pairing. But a new program at Stanford will study the automobile from a wide range of perspectives, including design, sociology, history, and engineering.

Clifford Nass, director of Stanford's new Revs program says, "There is probably no technology that is more important and less studied than the automobile."

At the program's launch yesterday, Nass presented a discussion on the behavioral science that goes into developing car navigation systems. He said when BMW introduced a state-of-the-art talking navigation system in the 1990s, the company decided to recall it -- not because it didn't work, but because German male drivers complained that they didn't want to take directions from a female voice.

Nass says that's just one example of research that will be folded into the new program. "If you think about the social impact, the historical impact, the impact on literature and film... try to imagine 20th century film without automobiles, try to imagine the suburbs without automobiles. Try to imagine almost any aspect of life without automobiles. And there's remarkably little research."

Sponsored

Nass says the collaborative research that Revs will facilitate will hopefully affect the thinking that goes into future cars.

Related:

lower waypoint
next waypoint
Map: What You Need to Earn to Afford a Median-Priced Home in Your County in CaliforniaNewsom Eyes Cuts to California’s $500M Anti-Foreclosure Fund for RentersEarly Bay Area Heat Wave Brings Hottest Temperatures of the Year So FarInside Sutro Baths, San Francisco's Once Grand Bathing PalaceYouth and Nonprofits Rally Against Cuts to SF Family Support ProgramsHalf Moon Bay Mayor Calls Newsom's Legal Threat Over Farmworker Housing UnhelpfulIt's Official: Oakland Port Once Again Votes to Change Airport Name to 'San Francisco Bay Oakland International Airport'What Makes a Burrito…a Burrito?Berkeley Passes Legal Protections for Polyamory, Joining OaklandFailures of SF Office on Sexual Assault Complaints Draw Scrutiny