CO-LOCATED EVENTS
NextPrevious

Session

1 | Challenge Your Peers

Monday, December 08

04:30 PM - 05:30 PM

Live in Dearborn, Michigan

Less Details

  • How do different driving conditions (e.g., urban vs. rural, highway vs. city driving) affect sensor accuracy?
  • What role do environmental factors such as lighting, weather, and road conditions play in sensor performance?
  • What advancements in sensor technology or software algorithms can enhance adaptability?
  • How do we test and validate these systems under extreme conditions?
  • What redundancy or fail-safe mechanisms are necessary to ensure reliability?
"PE"
Workshop

Speaker

Neha Singhal

Design Researcher – Human Factors and Interaction Design, Ford Motor Company

Neha is a passionate advocate for Human-Centered Design, an Interactive Design Research lead at the Human Factors Design and Research team at Ford Motor Company. She focuses on HMI artifacts, augmented reality studies, and human factors research for advanced vehicle technologies. With a Master’s in Human-Computer Interaction, she has extensive experience in rapid prototyping and interaction design, specializing in user research, usability engineering, information architecture, data visualization, system thinking, and design thinking. Her previous roles include leading large-scale user research, experimental design at Ford, and user experience design at INVIA Medical Imaging Solutions and Indiana University Health. Neha strives to create intuitive and effective user experiences by leveraging empathy and data-driven design.

Company

Ford Motor Company

Ford Motor Company is a global company based in Dearborn, Michigan. The company designs, manufactures, markets and services a full line of Ford cars, trucks, SUVs, electrified vehicles and Lincoln luxury vehicles, provides financial services through Ford Motor Credit Company and is pursuing leadership positions in electrification; mobility solutions, including self-driving services; and connected services. Ford employs approximately 190,000 people worldwide.

NextPrevious