SELF-DRIVING CARS STILL ARE PRETTY RELIANT ON PEOPLE.

LOS
ANGELES – Futuristic self-driving cars travelling along California roads
have needed plenty of old-fashioned human intervention to stay safe.
California’s
Department of Motor Vehicles on Tuesday released reports filed by seven
companies the agency gave permission to test prototype vehicles in
public. The documents summarized instances in which a human driver had
to take over due to technology problems or other safety concerns.
The reports show wildly different levels of success since on-road testing started in September 2014.
Experts in the technology said Google, whose cars drove the most by
far, performed relatively well, though they also cautioned that the
testing typically happened during good weather. Other companies reported
frequent instances in which the person who is required to be in the
front seat – just in case – had to grab the wheel.
Nissan,
for example, tested just 1,485 miles in public, but reported 106 cases
where the driver had to take control. The automaker has said it plans to
have “commercially viable autonomous drive vehicles” by 2020. A
spokeswoman did not return a request for comment.
Google said its
cars needed human help 341 times over 424,000 miles. That would be the
equivalent of about 10 times per year, given the 12,000 miles the
average U.S. vehicle travels annually.
In 11 of the 341 instances, Google said its cars would have gotten in a crash.
The
head of the company’s self-driving car project said that while the
results are encouraging, they also show the technology has yet to reach
his goal of not needing someone behind the wheel.
“We’re
seeing lots of improvement. But it’s not quite ready yet,” Urmson said.
“That’s exactly why we test our vehicles with a steering wheel and
pedals.”
The California Department of Motor Vehicles, which is
writing new regulations for the technology, said it was still reviewing
in the reports.
Google reported 272 cases in which the cars’
software or onboard sensors failed. Though Google did not release
detailed scenarios, the problems included issues with the self-driving
cars seeing traffic lights, yielding to pedestrians or committing
traffic violations. There were also cases where intervention was needed
because other drivers were reckless, and several dozen instances of an
“unwanted manoeuvr” by Google’s car.
Bryant Walker Smith, a
professor at the University of South Carolina who closely follows
self-driving car developments, said Google’s rate of potential
collisions was “not terribly high, but certainly not trivial.” He said
it remains difficult to gauge how self-driving cars compare to accident
rates among human drivers, since even the best data underreport minor
collisions that are never reported to authorities.
While
Google’s problem rate is “impressively low,” a trained safety driver
should remain in the front seat, said Raj Rajkumar, an engineering
professor at Carnegie Mellon University who specializes in self-driving
cars.
According to data in Google’s report, a driver typically took control within one second of the car asking for help.
Drivers
at other companies often reacted quickly as well, according to their
reports, though Volkswagen Group of America reported that, in one case,
it was more than 12 minutes before the person took control. A company
spokesman did not have immediate comment.
John Simpson, a frequent
critic of Google who focuses on privacy issues for the non-profit group
Consumer Watchdog, said the company’s report “underscores the need for a
driver behind the steering wheel capable of taking control of the robot
car.”
Google has argued to California regulators that once the
company concludes the cars are ready for the public to use, they should
not need a steering wheel or pedals because human intervention would
actually make them less safe.
READ MORE: Ford believes its self-driving car could take on a Canadian winter
Google
released its report Tuesday before the agency posted reports from other
companies in what Google described as an effort to be transparent about
its safety record. The company had lobbied against having to report
disengagements in the first place, saying the data could be
misinterpreted.
The other companies testing self-driving cars on
California streets are Tesla Motors, Mercedes-Benz, and parts suppliers
Bosch and Delphi.
Google’s testing mostly involves driving around
the company’s Silicon Valley headquarters or the streets of Austin,
Texas. The company’s rate of human intervention has improved in recent
months, according to its data, but Urmson cautioned that the rate might
again rise as Google subjects the cars to more challenging environments
and weather conditions.
Google said its cars would have been
responsible in eight of the 11 avoided accidents, according to computer
modeling the company performed later. In two other cases, its cars would
have hit a traffic cone.
Google cars have been involved in nine
collisions since September 2014. In each case, the other car was
responsible, according to an analysis by researchers at Virginia Tech
University.
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