When you’re driving a car, you’re invested with a sense of purpose: stay alert, don’t crash, optimize your route for the fastest and most comfortable experience. But what about when self-driving cars become the norm, and we’re no longer involved in those tasks? You’ll probably want to catch up on work, or play a game to fight the inevitable boredom—two things Apple thinks will be done in VR in the near future.

A recently published patent from Apple delves into this all-too-likely future, and theorizes that VR will be used to not only fight boredom in the car, but also mitigate motion sickness by completely supplanting screens such as laptops and smartphones and actively compensating for motion-related sickness.

Motion sickness is typically caused by the disconnect between what a user sees and what they feel, something early VR enthusiasts know all too well. Many game design techniques can be employed to create exceedingly comfortable VR experiences, such as rendering cockpits, and using similar FOV filters to limit the sensation of movement in your peripheral view, although this is the first time we’ve heard these tried-and-true concepts being used outside the realm of objectively fun things like VR-enabled roller coasters and purpose-built motion simulators.

image courtesy US Patent and Trademark Office

The patent outlines a VR headset system that’s ties into the active controls of a self-driving car that could “provide virtual views that match visual cues with the physical motions that a passenger experiences,” and be “altered to accommodate a passenger upon determining that the passenger is prone to or is exhibiting signs of motion sickness.”

For users looking to catch up on work, the patent puts forward a pretty ingenious idea: while wearing a VR headset, a stabilized virtual screen could provide a solid anchor point, totally doing away with many people’s discomfort of focusing on a screen such as a laptop or smartphone, which are well-known for causing nausea after prolonged periods. Stabilizing the screen could be done by feeding data from the car’s sensors, control system, and external sources to the headset system, and visually counteracting outside forces on the user’s visual field.

image courtesy US Patent and Trademark Office
SEE ALSO
'Pokémon GO' Now Uses Apple's ARKit on iOS 11, Bringing Pokémon Closer to Reality

For users looking for a more playful distraction, the patent also outlines a system that, instead of counteracting the forces that cause motion sickness, uses them to the passenger’s advantage. Replacing the outside world with another, more engaging environment with objectives, you could feel like you’re driving across a the ruins of an apocalypse, fending off a horde of brain-eating zombies, or touring the streets of an ancient city on your 45 minute ride to the office.

a virtual meeting on the road, image courtesy US Patent and Trademark Office

The patent even explores the idea of serving up virtual content according to how susceptible you are to motion sickness, giving you more virtual, stabilized anchor points and a horizon to help ward off motion-related nausea.

So while many are still pondering what VR’s ‘killer app’ could be—the reason to buy a headset if only for the one, super useful app—it may be we need look no further than our self-driving future yet to come.

Newsletter graphic

This article may contain affiliate links. If you click an affiliate link and buy a product we may receive a small commission which helps support the publication. More information.


Well before the first modern XR products hit the market, Scott recognized the potential of the technology and set out to understand and document its growth. He has been professionally reporting on the space for nearly a decade as Editor at Road to VR, authoring more than 3,500 articles on the topic. Scott brings that seasoned insight to his reporting from major industry events across the globe.
  • George Vieira IV

    Hmm, Pueget already has a working prototype self driving car with an integrated VR system that shows passing cars as flocks of birds and such.

    • Sam Illingworth

      That’s pretty cool!

    • Sandra

      Google offers all people 97 US dollars per/hr.. & with each week reliably paychecks … Any person can also catch it!!!on Monday I bought a great new Lotus Elise after I been making $6327 this past four weeks .it’s definitly nicest-work however you may no longer forgive yourself if you don’t view it.!eg1001q:➻➻➻ http://GoogleInfoHighestPaidWorkFromHomeJobs/earncash/$99/per-hour ★★p★v★p★c★★★w★x★★z★★q★f★★★h★f★p★★★u★★k★★★h★r★★t★j★c★l★★m★s★v★i★★v::::::::!fh87v:wevkurs

  • Ian Shook

    Jesus Christ it’s not going to kill people to not be looking at a screen 24/7. Look out the damn window, read a book, chat with a friend. Are they also working on patents for waterproof VR so we don’t get bored in the shower? What about when we’re relaxing at a beach? Is there a sandproof one coming?

    • rob

      we can hope

  • NooYawker

    Has anyone lost their minds being a passenger in a car? How is it different being in a self driving car?

  • David Herrington

    Hey guys, I just thought I would share my new patent. It’s for a VR HMD that you can use while you are traveling to work in your flying car. I probably won’t get much use for it right now, but it will be worth its weight in gold in 100 years.

    Forget about actually making VR or flying cars, patents are where the real money is.

  • Foreign Devil

    Reality getting no love!

  • brubble

    Ahh I see, death will be swift as you wont see it coming. Very clever.

  • mirak

    I though the only funny thing in taking self driving cars was to watch the pedestrian and the cyclist avoid beeing killed by the car.

  • Kenji Fujimori

    Fuck Tim Cook and his snake oil salesmanship