Driverless vehicles -safe at any speed?

The development of driverless vehicles is ongoing, with manufacturers in the US, Europe, Japan, South Korea and China all working on various projects. But as the recent pedestrian fatality involving a driverless car under test in Arizona highlights, safety is not entirely assured. One key problem is that the road environment is not straightforward and self-driving vehicles have to share roadspace with vehicles under human control. However, human behaviour is not easy to predict. Nor is there one mode of beh
May 22, 2018
Mike Woof 2015 avatar
The development of driverless vehicles is ongoing, with manufacturers in the US, Europe, Japan, South Korea and China all working on various projects. But as the recent pedestrian fatality involving a driverless car under test in Arizona highlights, safety is not entirely assured. One key problem is that the road environment is not straightforward and self-driving vehicles have to share roadspace with vehicles under human control. However, human behaviour is not easy to predict. Nor is there one mode of behaviour for a human-operated vehicle in the roadway. Different road users - cars, vans, trucks taxis and in particular motorcyclists and cyclists - behave in radically different ways from each other. But this is only part of the problem; another lies with the technology itself. The Federation of European Motorcycle Associations, 2906 FEMA, has been discussing its concerns over semi-autonomous vehicles for some time. At the request of FEMA (Federation of European Motorcyclists’ Associations) and the Dutch motorcyc

lists’ organisations MAG and KNMV, the Netherlands Vehicle Authority (RDW) investigated the visibility of motorcycles for vehicles with semi-autonomous systems to control vehicle speed.

The tests show that in some cases the systems will detect a motorcycle at a greater distance than it will detect a passenger car. However, if a motorcycle rides at or near the edge of the lane the system fails to see the motorcycle. In those cases, action had to be taken by the driver of the car to prevent a collision. The basic problem is that the current generation vehicles with the semi-autonomous technology only have a limited scan width for detecting vehicles in front. These can spot another car, van, bus or truck immediately in front, but will not pick up a motorcyclist (or for that matter a cyclist) not riding in the centre of the lane.

But both motorcyclists and cyclists have strong safety reasons for not riding in the centre of a lane at times. Road markings, metal drain covers and asphalt joints (usually the first part of a road surface to fail) are all frequently located in the centre of a traffic lane.

Meanwhile a report from the Forum of European Road Safety Research Institutes (FERSI) and 7264 VTI, the Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute (Statens väg- och transportforskningsinstitut) shows that new technology, improved attention to unprotected travellers and new forms of driver training need to be implemented to ensure increased safety for self-driving vehicles.

In addition, an article recently published in the Financial Times written by Mica Endsley, president of SA Technologies and former chief scientist of the US Air Force, further highlights safety concerns surrounding driverless vehicles. Endsley’s experience in aviation shows that assuming technology will address human error and prevent crashes is incorrect. Instead, such safety technologies change the way people behave, resulting in different kinds of errors. Endsley also said that increased vehicle autonomy results in lower levels of human engagement. Should a problem arise that the self-driving vehicle has not been programmed to deal with, a human at the controls will have low levels of engagement and high levels of complacency and may take too long to respond. The cause of the fatal crash in Arizona has yet to be discovered. But while driverless vehicle technology will improve over time, for the moment the systems are imperfect. Endsley cautioned that until such time as the technology improves significantly, autonomous vehicles will remain dangerous.

Rather than a Brave New World, driverless vehicles may instead deliver new types of crashes.

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