The next destination for the University of Virginia School of Medicine’s efforts to help people with autism learn to drive: virtual reality.
Daniel J. Cox, a researcher with 鶹ƽ Department of Psychiatry, has been using a room-sized driving simulator to assist people with autism-spectrum disorders in becoming comfortable behind the wheel. But now he is taking his simulator to the next level by turning it into a portable, “mixed-reality” experience.
Instead of users having to travel to the simulator in 鶹ƽ Driving Safety Laboratory, the simulation could go home with them in the form of a VR headset, Cox said. That could dramatically expand the simulation’s reach, helping more people learn to drive.

