The present invention is generally directed to an illuminated traffic sign and, more specifically, to an illuminated traffic sign that includes vehicle sensing capabilities.
Traffic signs have been utilized in various locations, e.g., at road intersections, road curves, along roads and at railroad crossings, to alert drivers of motor vehicles to various road hazards and applicable traffic regulations. A number of designers have incorporated one or more light sources within traffic signs and have incorporated traffic signs on certain motor vehicles, e.g., school buses. U.S. Pat. No. 5,635,902 discloses a school bus stop sign that is rotatably coupled to a school bus. The bus stop sign includes an array of light emitting diodes (LEDs) disposed on the stop sign to provide illumination. An associated flashing or pulsing circuit is utilized in conjunction with the LEDs, which may be arranged on a sign to define a word, such as “stop,” and may be arranged on both sides of the bus stop sign. The pulsing circuit periodically provides current to the LEDs, which causes them to flash, enhancing the visibility of the bus stop sign to drivers of nearby vehicles and/or children entering and exiting the associated school bus.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,222,462 is directed to an apparatus for warning drivers of the presence of a concealed hazard, such as a concealed school bus stopping location. The apparatus includes a sign, adapted for installation along a highway, with associated warning lights and a receiver. The warning lights are periodically illuminated when the sign is in a warning mode, which occurs when the receiver receives a warning signal from a transmitter that may be located within a school bus. The receiver is electronically connected to electronic circuitry that includes a switch, which flashes the warning lights. In a disclosed embodiment, the warning lights include an LED array. In another disclosed embodiment, a solar panel provides power to recharge a rechargeable battery, which powers the receiver, warning lights and associated electronic circuitry.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,935,190 is directed to a traffic monitoring system that includes a Doppler radar transceiver, a video camera and a digital computer for processing a Doppler signal. The system also includes a video cassette recorder (VCR), a high-speed camera and a laptop computer for downloading control settings and a program from a diskette or memory card to the computer. The system automatically measures the speeds of vehicles, photographs vehicles that exceed a specified speed limit and records prevailing traffic conditions onto a video tape installed within the VCR. The Doppler radar transceiver generates a Doppler signal having a pair of channels. The phase of one channel, with respect to the other channel, provides an indication of whether a vehicle is approaching or receding from the Doppler radar transceiver.
As stated above, traffic signs, e.g., stop signs, speed limit signs, yield signs and railroad crossing signs, are widely utilized to alert a driver of a motor vehicle and to instruct a driver of a motor vehicle to take an appropriate action. However, in many cases, a traffic sign may be concealed from view due to an obstruction, such as tall vegetation, walls, buildings, billboards, a hill and/or a curve in a road. Further, drivers that are unfamiliar with a given area may fail to see a traffic sign, even when unobstructed, and, thus, fail to respond appropriately. As one particular example, the inventor's son was nearly killed and the vehicle he was driving was totaled when a young driver in a small pickup truck ran a stop sign at 55 mph and hit the vehicle in the lower section of the driver's door. The intersection was a two-way stop and the inventor's son was on a through road with no stop sign. The intersection offered no view of the orthogonal road approaching the intersection. In this case, the young driver was distracted and failed to observe a plainly visible stop sign. Such observation failures may be relatively frequent on country roads on the outskirts of populated areas, as any driver can become preoccupied or fail to notice a roadside warning sign with tragic results.
What is needed is a traffic sign that alerts a driver of a motor vehicle to the traffic sign such that the driver of the motor vehicle can take an appropriate action.
The present invention is directed to a traffic system for alerting a driver of a motor vehicle to a traffic sign that includes a sensor, a light source and a control unit. The sensor provides a motor vehicle detection signal and the control unit illuminates the light source responsive to the motor vehicle detection signal. In one embodiment, the control unit illuminates the light source when the detected motor vehicle is approaching the traffic sign. In other embodiments, the sensor is one or a combination of a light sensor, image sensor, passive infrared sensor and a radar sensor. According to another embodiment, the light source includes one or more light emitting diodes (LEDs). The system may include a power source, which includes a rechargeable battery and a solar panel.
These and other features, advantages and objects of the present invention will be further understood and appreciated by those skilled in the art by reference to the following specification, claims and appended drawings.
In the drawings:
In the implementation of any traffic system, a designer must generally contend with issues of economics and environment. Mass produced intelligent interactive vehicular signage has the potential to make a two stop sign intersection nearly as safe as a conventional traffic light, which may cost fifty times as much, with less wasted time of drivers at the intersection, less wasted gasoline and less driver frustration. Seen another way, mass produced interactive signs with intelligence can cost effectively be used in ten to one hundred times more locations as conventional signs and signals, potentially saving tens of thousands of lives and hundreds of thousands of injuries and vehicular collisions.
According to one embodiment of the present invention, a driver approaching a sign is not alerted if their vehicle is performing in accordance with the sign. If, for instance, a driver's speed is within prescribed limits and a sensor indicates that a vehicle is slowing properly for a stop sign, then there is little reason to flash lights or otherwise distract a driver who obviously sees the stop sign. By the same token, if a vehicle is traveling within specified limits on a highway, there is little reason to use emitted light to draw a driver's attention to a speed limit sign that the driver is obviously obeying. The idea is to avoid alerting a driver when all is okay.
This also conserves energy and preserves a driver's piece of mind, avoiding nuisance warnings when there is no need.
On the other hand, if a driver is not slowing appropriately and is unlikely to stop for a stop sign, then a flashing light focused on the driver of the oncoming vehicle may optionally grow even more intense and flash more rapidly as it becomes clear that the driver does not see the sign and has little chance to stop appropriately. By the same token, if a speed limit sign indicates 70 mph and an oncoming vehicle is going 90 mph, then a focused signal may become more aggressive as danger increases.
That is, one aspect of the invention is do not bother drivers if they are performing properly and only attract driver attention when there is a safety need that is likely to result in an unsafe driving situation. The idea of putting the intelligence in the sign and not in the vehicle is another aspect of the invention. Putting intelligence in the vehicle is not a bad idea, but only the newest vehicles will have it. Putting intelligence in the sign itself means every vehicle that passes will benefit. Putting intelligence in every vehicle on the road is a somewhat impractical task, whereas putting intelligence in the signage benefits everyone, regardless of the age or cost of a vehicle. In addition, vehicles get old and eventually are junked, whereas intelligence in the signage generally has a much longer life with far greater economic and environmental efficiency for society.
An optional extension of this concept is to incorporate additional sensors for environmental factors that can affect safety, such as day, night, ice, snow, fog, temperature, rain, traffic density, etc. By using a reconfigurable display on the traffic sign, the driving instructions shown on the traffic sign can be adjusted based on environmental safety factors, with an attendant adjustment by the control circuit of the warning signal light to the approaching vehicle. The traffic sign then becomes increasingly intelligent with each technological advance.
Thus, the present invention is directed to a traffic system and method for alerting a driver of a motor vehicle to a traffic sign. The traffic system detects a motor vehicle and illuminates one or more light source(s) that are attached to the traffic sign responsive to one or more detected motor vehicle(s). According to one embodiment, the system is capable of determining whether the motor vehicle is approaching the traffic sign and only illuminating the light source(s) when the detected motor vehicle is approaching the traffic sign. This conserves power and, in situations where the traffic system is implemented with rechargeable batteries, can advantageously extend the operating life of the traffic system.
An even more energy conserving control and sensor technique is to sense a vehicle's speed and/or rate of change of speed to make the decision to illuminate the light source(s) on the signage only if the approaching vehicle is not performing within appropriate safety parameters. In this manner, the light signal is only transmitted to the oncoming vehicle when the vehicle is performing outside of prescribed safety criterion required for the purpose of the signage. The aggressiveness of the signal emitted from the sign may be commensurate with the degree to which the vehicle is performing outside the desired safety criterion and more aggressive signaling can be achieved by raising intensity and/or flash rate. Various types of sensors may be utilized to detect the motor vehicle, such as one or more of the following: a light sensor, an image sensor, a color enhanced image sensor, a passive infrared sensor (PSIR) radar sensor, an image intensified sensor, a stereoscopic image sensor, an IR emitter/receiver sensor, a twin PSIR sensor (using a first PSIR sensor for ambient and a second PSIR sensor aimed at the oncoming vehicle) and multiple light sensors aimed in different directions to balance out effects of ambient light. One optional light sensor is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,359,274, entitled PHOTODIODE LIGHT SENSOR, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
In one embodiment, the plurality of light sources includes a plurality of light emitting diodes (LEDs) formed in an array. Suitable high-power LEDs are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,335,548, entitled SEMICONDUCTOR RADIATION EMITTER PACKAGE, which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In another embodiment, a power source for powering the sensor, the control unit and the plurality of light sources is provided by a rechargeable battery that receives energy from a solar panel or photovoltaic module.
Turning to
If a light sensor is utilized, it is preferable that the control unit 102 measure an ambient light level so as to select a threshold level to compare to the light level sensed at any particular instant. Such an ambient light level may be attained as an average level over a specified time interval. By setting a variable threshold as a function of the ambient light level, the control unit 102 may prevent the light sources from being inadvertently illuminated due to bright sunlight. Additionally, the threshold or a second threshold may be used to discriminate between headlights of approaching vehicles and tail lights of receding vehicles. Alternatively, discrimination between such vehicles may be accomplished by limiting the field of view of the sensor to that in which approaching vehicles are expected or using one or more optical filters, such as a red light blocking filter. The light source 106 may also take a variety of forms, e.g., a multi-colored LED array of one or more incandescent bulbs. Alternately, the sign of
When the power source 108 includes a solar panel and a rechargeable battery, the power source 108 may be located along a top of the traffic sign 202 or otherwise oriented to receive light from the sun. A control unit 102 is coupled to the sensor 104 and the light source 106 and receives power from the power source 108. Responsive to a motor vehicle detection signal provided by the sensor 104, the control unit 102 may cause the light sources 106 and/or 110 to intermittently turn off and on, i.e., flash at a desired rate. The control unit 102 may also be configured to alter the flash rate and light intensity in response to the degree of danger posed by the oncoming vehicle. It should be appreciated that the present invention can be incorporated within any number of different types of traffic signs, e.g., a stop sign, a yield sign, a railroad crossing sign, a school sign, a curve sign, among other such signs.
Accordingly, a traffic control device has been described herein, which detects a vehicle and alerts a driver of the vehicle to the presence of the traffic sign by periodically illuminating a plurality of light sources. Illumination of the light sources upon detection of a motor vehicle can be particularly advantageous to a driver who is unfamiliar with the area in which they are driving or in bringing to the attention of the driver of the motor vehicle the presence of a traffic sign, which is otherwise obstructed from view.
The above description is considered that of the preferred embodiments only. Modification of the invention will occur to those skilled in the art and to those who make or use the invention. Therefore, it is understood that the embodiments shown in the drawings and described above are merely for illustrative purposes and not intended to limit the scope of the invention, which is defined by the following claims as interpreted according to the principles of patent law, including the Doctrine of Equivalents.
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| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20040183694 A1 | Sep 2004 | US |