About this Event
This lecture explores the “vaccine paradox” of automated driving: why rare, highly publicized failures of self-driving vehicles provoke intense emotional and political reactions while the far more common harms of human driving remain normalized. Drawing on risk psychology, public-health history, and human-factors research, Prof. McGehee examines how visibility imbalance, trust, and perceptions of control shape public acceptance of emerging vehicle automation. Using real-world examples from automated-vehicle deployments alongside lessons from vaccine adoption and safety communication, the talk argues that societal expectations for perfection in automation may obscure meaningful population-level safety gains. The presentation concludes by discussing how transparency, responsible system design, and careful language around driver-assistance technologies can help align public perception with evidence as automated driving evolves toward broader deployment.
Agenda
🕑: 02:00 PM - 02:03 PM
Lecture Starts
🕑: 02:03 PM - 02:05 PM
Webinar Introduction
Host: Prof. Henry Liu
🕑: 02:05 PM - 02:45 PM
Presentation
Host: Prof. Daniel V. McGehee
🕑: 02:45 PM - 03:00 PM
Moderated Q&A
Host: Prof. Henry Liu
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute, 2901 Baxter Road, Ann Arbor, United States
USD 0.00












