LAS VEGAS — In a vision of the near future shared at CES, a girl slides into the back seat of her parents' car and the cabin instantly comes alive. The vehicle recognizes her, knows it's her birthday and cues up her favorite song without a word spoken.
''Think of the car as having a soul and being an extension of your family,'' Sri Subramanian, Nvidia's global head of generative AI for automotive, said Tuesday.
Subramanian's example, shared with a CES audience on the show's opening day in Las Vegas, illustrates the growing sophistication of AI-powered in-cabin systems and the expanding scope of personal data that smart vehicles may collect, retain and use to shape the driving experience.
Across the show floor, the car emerged less as a machine and more as a companion as automakers and tech companies showcased vehicles that can adapt to drivers and passengers in real time — from tracking heart rates and emotions to alerting if a baby or young child is accidentally left in the car.
Bosch debuted its new AI vehicle extension that aims to turn the cabin into a ''proactive companion.'' Nvidia, the poster child of the AI boom, announced Alpamayo, its new vehicle AI initiative designed to help autonomous cars think through complex driving decisions. CEO Jensen Huang called it a ''ChatGPT moment for physical AI.''
But experts say the push toward a more personalized driving experience is intensifying questions about how much driver data is being collected.
''The magic of AI should not just mean all privacy and security protections are off,'' said Justin Brookman, director of marketplace policy at Consumer Reports.
Unlike smartphones or online platforms, cars have only recently become major repositories of personal data, Brookman said. As a result, the industry is still trying to establish the ''rules of the road'' for what automakers and tech companies are allowed to do with driver data.