Bendel, Oliver2018-01-082018-01-0820142014https://dl.gi.de/handle/20.500.12116/11428Advanced driver assistance systems are widely used. Some support and inform the driver. Others relieve him or her of certain tasks—and transform the human-guided system into a semi-autonomous one. For some years also fully autonomous systems have been on the roads, so-called self-driving cars, as prototypes of companies and within research projects. From the perspective of ethics—both of the special fields of ethics like animal ethics, information ethics and technology ethics and of machine ethics which can be understood as a counterpart to human ethics—advanced driver assistance systems raise various questions. The aim of this paper is to derive suggestions from animal ethics and other disciplines for the improvement and development of the systems. The basis are literature analysis and own classifications and considerations. The result is that there are many possibilities to expand existing systems and to develop new functions in the context with the aim to reduce the number of animal victims.Advanced driver assistance systemsAnimal ethicsInformation ethicsMachine ethicsRoad killSelf-driving carsTechnology ethicsAdvanced Driver Assistance Systems and AnimalsText/Journal Article1610-1987