Honda's bike doesn't just help a person keep a bike upright, though. The motorcycle also keeps itself upright, even without a rider. The researchers realized that if a bike can stay upright on its own, then why not allow it to drive itself? So it did. If you're thinking that Honda has outfitted its research bike with gyroscopes, though, you would be mistaken. Instead the company has taken its Uni-Cub mobility research and applied it to a real-world problem.

The bikes doesn't stay in self-balancing mode at all times. At high speeds, the feature isn't needed. But when you slow down the bike transforms from regular riding mode to balance mode. When it does this, the front forks (the metal bars that connect the front wheel to the rest of the motorcycle) extend the front tire away from the rest of the cycle lowering its center of gravity. No word on when a bike with the Riding Assist technology will actually end up in production, but we're hoping it happens soon, for the sake of our side mirrors and grips.