Presentation

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MA3PresentationSampleDemo.pptx

Notes on Citations and Inserting Videos: The following slides were taken from a presentation to illustrate the correct way to indicate citations for the title slide and content slides as well as the works cited.

IMPORTANT: MLA is used in this demo PowerPoint. You will have to make adjustments if you use APA in your PowerPoint. This is not a complete presentation. Just a few slides to demonstrate documentation format.

Insert videos using the Insert/Video “Online Video” or “Video from My PC.” YouTube videos must be saved to your computer in order to be inserted as a “Video from My PC.” This will allow you to have the video window appear via animation and also go full screen automatically or on click. You can use a program such as ClipConverter.cc (http://www.clipconverter.cc /) to save the video.

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Another issue with videos is the length of the video. How much of the video do you really want your audience to watch? The only portions of a video you want to show are the ones that help support the point(s) you are making. This could be the entire video, but it could also be just a portion of the video.

This can be done in two ways:

Using the advanced Video Tools/Playback, you can set the video to start and/or stop at selected points. These features will only work if you insert the video as a file that has been saved to your computer.

If you insert the video as a YouTube link, you will not be able to have it enter the screen via animation, nor will you be able to start and stop it at certain points. Instead, you should place a note at the end of the introductory info above the video that explains how much of the video the audience should watch. (e.g. “Watch this video up to 5:15 as what follows is not relevant to the presentation.”)

Self-Driving Cars: Social and Psychological Effects

By:

Barbara Bane

Peter Graves

Martin Landau

Source: Mercedes-Benz F 015 Luxury in Motion Research Car

December 12, 2016

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Navigating City Streets

This is a video from the Google Self-Driving Car Project to help explain how the car uses its sensors and cameras to detect objects in every direction so it can react as needed. Also, explained in the video are some of the situations test drivers have ran into while taking the cars out on the streets for test runs.

Background of Self-Driving Cars

Source: Google Self-Driving Car Project

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Background of Self-Driving Cars (continued)

The video shows how Google is trying to eliminate one of the biggest concerns about self-driving cars: the inability to adapt to situations.

Next, we will examine how self-driving cars work.

How self-driving cars work

- Sensors

- Cameras outside the cars

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Background of Self-Driving Cars

The technology that accompanies the self-driving cars comes with an expense in order to cover the cost of making these cars.

Expenses

- Prices vary from company to company

Mercedes-Benz – more expensive

Google self driving cars – $75,000 (Brustein)

Background of Self-Driving Cars (continued)

Future Projections

- These cars become more developed as time goes on.

Levels at which a car can drive itself continues to increase.

By 2030, the cars will be fully self-driving.

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“Self-Driving Car Evolution”

Future Projections

Source: “Self-Driving Car Evolution”

The following graphic shows how the technology of self-driving cars has and will evolve over time.

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The graphic on the previous slide proves that, as self-driving cars continue to improve and develop, these cars will raise several ethical and legal issues that will have to be addressed by courts and insurance companies.

Ethical Issues

Tunnel Problem

- “An autonomous car on a single-lane mountain road is about to enter a tunnel when a child crossing just inside the entrance trips and falls. Does the car continue straight and run over the child, or does it swerve and hit either side of the tunnel entrance?” (Newcomb 45)

Figure 1: Customer Willingness to Buy a Partially Autonomous Car

Fully Autonomous vs. Fully Autonomous Self-Driving Cars

Figures 1 and 2 below show that more individuals would buy a partially autonomous car than would buy a fully autonomous car.

Figure 2: Customer Willingness to Buy a Fully Autonomous Car

Source: “Customer Willingness to Buy Autonomous Cars is Strong in the U.S.”

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The graphic on the previous slide shows that the ethical issue of trust is important in the minds of U.S. consumers of self-driving cars. One must believe that the car he or she is driving is going to get them where they want to go safely.

A partially autonomous car might be more trustworthy than one that is fully autonomous.

Ethical Issues

Trust

consumers must be able to trust the vehicle they are driving

many drivers are concerned about a self-driving car going out of control

manufacturers of self-driving cars will have to prove to consumers that the cars are safe

Brustein, Joshua. “Nice Self-Driving Car. But How Much Does It Cost?”

Bloomberg, 23 May 2013, www.bloomberg.com/bw/articles/2013-05-23/nice-self-driving-car-dot-but-how-much-does-it-cost. Accessed 1 Dec. 2016.

“Customer Willingness to Buy Autonomous Cars is Strong in the U.S.” Engineering.com, 14 Jan. 2014. Graph, www.engineering.com/ AdvancedManufacturing/ArticleID/9357/Self-Driving-Vehicles-by-2025a-Death-Knell-for-Auto-Manufacturing.aspx. Accessed 30 Nov. 2016.

Google Self-Driving Car Project. Navigating City Streets. YouTube, 27 May 2014. www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDOnn0-4Nq8. Accessed 1 Dec. 2016.

Mercedes-Benz F 015 Luxury in Motion Research Car. Mercedes-Benz. Illustration, www.mercedes-benz.com/en/mercedes-benz/innovation/research-vehicle-f-015-luxury-in-motion/. Accessed 30 Nov. 2016.

Works Cited

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Works Cited (continued)

Newcomb, Doug. "Who Should Be The Self-Driving Car's Moral Compass?" PC Magazine, Oct. 2014, 44-46. MasterFILE Premier, metis.findlay.edu:2048/login? url=http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=f5h&AN=98472576&site=eds-live. Accessed 29 Nov. 2016.

“Self-Driving Car Evolution.” Kurzweil Accelerating Intelligence. KurzweilAl Network. Jan. 2014. Illustration, www.kurzweilai.net/fully-self-driving-cars-expected-by-2030-says-forecast. Accessed 30 Nov. 2016.

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