experTalk "lex2vehicle: Bringing traffic law to the end user - the future starts now"

Jun 20, 2022
14:00 - 15:00 Uhr


Our Experts:

Hauke Fehlberg

Hauke Fehlberg

ASTRA Bundesamt für Strassen, CH

kathrin hagemann

Kathrin Hagemann

IAV Ingenieurgemeinschaft Auto und Verkehr, DE

Josef Kaltwasser  v2

Josef Kaltwasser

AlbrechtConsult, DE

konrad lachmayer web

Konrad Lachmayer

SFU Sigmund Freud PrivatUniversität Wien, AT

nik widmann web

moderiert von Nik Widmann

PRISMA solutions

florianH web

moderiert von Florian Hilti

PRISMA solutions


Register for free!

As road users, we know what we are allowed to do and what we are not allowed to do. Most of the time we are right. However, there are often situations in which we act more "by instinct" - because we don't know any better or because the rules are not clear in this situation.

Digitization, networking and automation mean that individual driving decisions are increasingly being made by machines instead of humans. However, traffic regulations are by definition aimed at humans. In addition, machines do not like to act "considering feelings", but require the clearest possible guidelines. Specifications that do not yet exist in this form anywhere.

Bringing traffic law to the end user is the mission behind lex2vehicle. In the coming decades, end users will be both human road users and automated vehicles, for which the same rules must apply in mixed traffic. After one and a half years of cross-national research work, it will be reported how such a paradigm shift can function in the sense of a legal-technical co-evolution. Participants can therefore expect a highly interdisciplinary experTalk on an up-to-date topic.

 

Date Monday, 20.06.2022 14:00-15:00

Location  

online (Meeting link will be sent to registered persons per e-mail

 

lex2vehicle was jointly funded by BMK (Federal Ministry for Climate Protection, AT), BMDV (Federal Ministry for Digital Affairs and Transport, DE) and ASTRA (Federal Roads Office, CH) as part of DACH transport infrastructure research.