Ford's Emoji Jacket Helps People to ‘Share The Road’

πŸ™‚ + πŸ§₯ + πŸ’‘ = πŸš— ❤️ 🚲

It has never been easier to get on your bike – with governments eager to promote cleaner air for cities, bike-sharing now commonplace and millions of people across Europe choosing to ride into work or cycle for sport and pleasure.

But communication between drivers and cyclists can be difficult with riders having to remove their hands from the handlebars to indicate changes in direction or to express thanks. Each year, according to the EU Commission’s Traffic Safety Basic Facts, around 2,000 cyclists are killed on Europe’s roads.

Now – as part of our ‘Share The Road’ campaign – we have commissioned a prototype Emoji Jacket. This one-of-a-kind creation, which is not available to buy, is designed to show how tensions could be eased by enabling riders to more easily and more clearly show drivers what their intentions are – and how they are feeling.

Dr. Neil Cohn PhD, assistant professor, Department of Communication and Cognition at Tilburg University, The Netherlands.
Emojis have become a fundamental part of how we use language. Whether used to convey facial expressions, humour, or sarcasm, they have become integral to our ability to express ourselves and quickly. This jacket created in partnership with Ford ‘Share the Road’ allows riders to express their feelings and creates an important emotional link between them and other road users.

Since first being created more than 20 years ago, emojis have been described as the first language born of the digital world and according to the first “Emoji Trend Report” most people feel more comfortable expressing their emotions through emojis than a phone call.

How it works

The jacket features an LED mesh panel that can display:
  • One of three emojis πŸ™‚☹️😐
  • Arrows ⬅️➡️ 
  • Hazard signal ⚠︎
The cyclist activates each emoji, indicators and the hazard sign using a wireless remote mounted on the bicycle’s handlebars.

Emmanuel Lubrani, ‘Share The Road’, Ford of Europe.
We are now living – and driving – in a world where communication is crucial. But all too often between drivers and cyclists this just comes down to the beeping of a horn or a rude gesture. Cyclists usually have to take a hand off the handlebars to communicate. The Emoji Jacket uses a universally understood means of communication to show one way in which tensions could be eased – and we all learn to ‘Share The Road.



The ‘Share The Road’ campaign seeks to foster harmony between road users and underlines our belief that enabling more people to cycle safely, especially for short journeys, benefits everyone.

The company has produced an award-winning virtual reality experience so that drivers and cyclists can better understand the challenges of each other’s journeys. ‘WheelSwap’ enables motorists and cyclists to see how inconsiderate driving and riding can be at the least hair-raising –and potentially fatal – for their fellow road users. Initial studies show that after undergoing the experience, nearly all participants said they would change their behaviour.


Comments

  1. This is about as ridiculous as anything I've seen. Utterly, utterly stupid. Stop loading all this crap on to cyclists and deal with the source of the problem: entitled motorists.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "Ford teamed up with language experts." Perhaps better to team up with transportation cyclists, to find out how motorists endanger them? Pictures on a cyclists back aren't going to stop a motorist from dooring a person, one of the main dangers displayed in your video.

    ReplyDelete

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