Would a self driving car world make it safe for cyclists?
#2376
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''That is the sound of... inevitability.''
#2377
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It's all academic-- any company fielding cars that run over pedestrians will be sued out of existence and not just by victimized walkers but also by occupants who were forced to participate in a killer business model and powerless to stop the wonton carnage... about like finding yourself in the wake like a deranged religious fanatic bulldozing about without a conscience. At least on trains, passengers could have pulled an alarm chain...
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None of us need to "argue" here at all. All this crap of scoring cheap debating points .... we should be big enough to let stuff slide.
As it happens, i don't think jefnvk's analogy regarding seven deaths makes the point well, for the reasons others have stated.
What i wish I didn't understand, is why people are still discussing it, as opposed to all the very valid points which he and others have made, which actually move the discussion forward.
Whatever.
As it happens, i don't think jefnvk's analogy regarding seven deaths makes the point well, for the reasons others have stated.
What i wish I didn't understand, is why people are still discussing it, as opposed to all the very valid points which he and others have made, which actually move the discussion forward.
Whatever.
You still discussed it and then complain about other people doing it.
How do you distinguish "the very valid points" from ones that aren't?
Presumably, he though all of his points were "very valid" (he said it "made perfect sense").
It doesn't help him (or anybody) to just ignore things that don't make sense.
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Ummm ... "wonton carnage" is what happens in Chinese restaurants .... and in WWII Japanese soldiers didn't charge into battle yelling "Bonsai" (unless they were very attached to their pruning abilities.)
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There were three points of failure:
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
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There were three points of failure:
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
#2383
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There were three points of failure:
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
#2384
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While motoring at 40 mph in the dark many years ago, I had a deer leap out right in front of me. It happened so close and fast that it was over before I had any chance to realize what I saw. I braked on instinct and lightly bumped her at maybe 15 mph. I saw her run away, there was zero damage to my car. There was no steering on my part, because as you pointed out, that takes more time.
I highly doubt a skilled, attentive driver would have hit this victim without braking at all, and certainly a machine that is supposed to be better than a human shouldn't have either. Which may have allowed Elaine, who made a mistake, to survive.
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It should also be noted that the two videos were released by the Tempe Police Department, not by Uber, since the police had physical possession of the vehicle and its dash cams and Uber did not have access after the collision. Whatever data Uber has on this incident has not yet been made public but I assume that the NHTSA investigators will obtain it and use the detailed data gathered by Uber from its sensors as well as its other investigative tools to come to a conclusion based on all the available facts and data.
The apologists presumably will continue in their attempts to whitewash Uber/AV failures and promote their dreams regardless of the evidence.
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Ummmm ... yeah, I am mystified by such hi-tch stuff.
She was about fifty feet from a vehicle traveling at about fifty feet per second when she became visible and was hit about a second after she was visible.
I just did the math.
By the time her feet are visible in the video, she is standing at the end of the second completely visible road marking, with almost no space in front of the first visible one. Those lines are standardized ten feet long, thirty feet of spacing, all over the country (https://mutcd.fhwa.dot.gov/htm/2003r1/part3/part3a.htm), meaning there is give or take fifty five to sixty feet of stopping distance. Again, since people claim to like evidence, this study (https://copradar.com/redlight/factors/IEA2000_ABS51.pdf) shows an average reaction time of 0.96 seconds for a person to begin to take evasive actions while driving, defined as letting off the accelerator. One second at 38MPH is equivalent to 55.7 feet per second, meaning if you are an average person you have travelled 53.5 feet before you have even stopped providing power to the car. Before you say you'd steer, time to initial steering and max braking are far slower than 0.96 seconds.
I just did the math.
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There were three points of failure:
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
1- the pedestrian didn't yield nor did she appear to be looking.
2- the AV didn't take reasonable action (for unknown reasons).
3- the "backup driver" wasn't paying attention.
1- The pedestrian has a requirement (practical and legal) to take due care. She was at risk by her own actions whatever the vehicle was.
2- The AV should have (it seems) been able to deal with the less-than-careful pedestrian.
3- The "backup driver" should have been paying attention.
I will continue to believe there are only two valid points of failure. #'s 2 & 3
The vehicle failed to observe what was clearly in it's path, for whatever reasons. Was this an anomaly or does it point to a larger fault?
The woman could have easily been an animal. If it had been, would Uber have even reported it?
__________________
nine mile skid on a ten mile ride
nine mile skid on a ten mile ride
#2390
Senior Member
Is there any information on how these vehicles are doing in their bad weather testing stages? Driving in Arizona is one thing, but most of the rest of us have large swings in weather throughout the year. For me it's a big swing this week as we had snow flurries Monday, it's 65 and sunny today, and they are expecting 1-2 inches of rain in the next couple of days.
It's one of the big reasons I'm curious how the car "sees", because it's common to have really poor visibility several times a year if a storm opens up on you suddenly while you're driving. That may only occur for 10-15 seconds on the road and you drive out of it. Temporary poor to zero visibility driving capability for rain, or snow whiteouts, will be a big selling point if I'm shopping for an AV. Whether it has a dashcam built in or not to record what I see will not be a big selling factor for me. I can just move the cameras I already own.
It's one of the big reasons I'm curious how the car "sees", because it's common to have really poor visibility several times a year if a storm opens up on you suddenly while you're driving. That may only occur for 10-15 seconds on the road and you drive out of it. Temporary poor to zero visibility driving capability for rain, or snow whiteouts, will be a big selling point if I'm shopping for an AV. Whether it has a dashcam built in or not to record what I see will not be a big selling factor for me. I can just move the cameras I already own.
Last edited by InOmaha; 03-22-18 at 12:04 PM.
#2391
Senior Member
The vehicle was driving beyond the lights. At night with only headlights to rely on, the vehicle should have done the 2-second rule. That allows the backup system (the human operator) a chance to respond in case the primary system failed (which it did). We also know the operator wasn't paying attention, so an attention sensor should be added to make sure the backup would work.
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The cheapo lo-tech dash cam used by Uber may not have even a fraction of the resolution or range of normal human vision.
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She was about fifty feet from a vehicle traveling at about fifty feet per second when she became visible and was hit about a second after she was visible.
I just did the math.
I just did the math.

#2394
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She presumably had to walk, pushing a bike, at least 30 feet from the medium strip across approximately 3 traffic lanes in unobstructed view of the Uber before it struck her.
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The difference is that, with a small amount of extra care, she could have avoided being killed.
If it had just been a human driver, would the driver even have reported it?
Last edited by njkayaker; 03-22-18 at 12:11 PM.
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I would agree if the headlights actually were as dim to human vision as they appear in the video recorded by the cheap dash cam used by the Uber vehicle. I assume the NHSTA will investigate if the headlights were really as dim as the dash cam portrays.
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At least with open source, the end user has the option of finding someone ethical to fix the product.
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Wow, a lot of stuff going on here, and (as predicted), we now have video of the incident.
Starting with the video itself, I don't think it was "doctored" or manipulated in any way, but it does seem particularly dark. You cannot see the victim at all until the beam of the headlights reach her. This seems a little strange, since there were street lights on either side of the road. Yes, she was in a "shadow" between the lights, but in a situation like that you still don't expect total darkness between the areas of light. And although she wasn't wearing any bright clothing, her shoes were white and should likely have been visible sooner.
I know it's impossible to say for sure, but a human driving at that time would likely have their eyes acclimated to the amount of light available and able to see at least something in the area between the streetlights. Also, considering the nature of the road, they would likely have had their high beams on in this situation, which would have made all the difference to an attentive human driver.
The observer is of course an afterthought, as she was clearly looking at her phone, and this only goes to show that putting in observers who aren't required to actively observe is completely pointless.
Moving on to some of the discussion here, it is indeed quite surprising the sensors didn't notice here, even in the dark. This is exactly the situation where we expect the technology to be superior to human perception, and clearly it is/was not.
Do human drivers kill thousands of people on the roads every year? Yes. We all know that. But how is that argument relevant to the idea that testing these AV's on public roads is a mistake?
Most testing is done on closed roads for a reason. No car company would ever get away with testing a brand new braking system for the first time on public roads, would they? Can you imagine if they did, and a fatality resulted, if their argument was that, 'a regular driver with a regular braking system probably would have done the same or worse, so move along...'? Point is, some of you are being way too dismissive here.
With the resources these companies have, it should be very easy for them to test these things in a closed, safe environment. Situations like these could be simulated with numerous permutations, so it would likely even be superior. Surely something like a pedestrian moving perpendicular into the path of the vehicle could, and should, be simulated in a better way then waiting for it to actually happen.
Starting with the video itself, I don't think it was "doctored" or manipulated in any way, but it does seem particularly dark. You cannot see the victim at all until the beam of the headlights reach her. This seems a little strange, since there were street lights on either side of the road. Yes, she was in a "shadow" between the lights, but in a situation like that you still don't expect total darkness between the areas of light. And although she wasn't wearing any bright clothing, her shoes were white and should likely have been visible sooner.
I know it's impossible to say for sure, but a human driving at that time would likely have their eyes acclimated to the amount of light available and able to see at least something in the area between the streetlights. Also, considering the nature of the road, they would likely have had their high beams on in this situation, which would have made all the difference to an attentive human driver.
The observer is of course an afterthought, as she was clearly looking at her phone, and this only goes to show that putting in observers who aren't required to actively observe is completely pointless.
Moving on to some of the discussion here, it is indeed quite surprising the sensors didn't notice here, even in the dark. This is exactly the situation where we expect the technology to be superior to human perception, and clearly it is/was not.
Do human drivers kill thousands of people on the roads every year? Yes. We all know that. But how is that argument relevant to the idea that testing these AV's on public roads is a mistake?
Most testing is done on closed roads for a reason. No car company would ever get away with testing a brand new braking system for the first time on public roads, would they? Can you imagine if they did, and a fatality resulted, if their argument was that, 'a regular driver with a regular braking system probably would have done the same or worse, so move along...'? Point is, some of you are being way too dismissive here.
With the resources these companies have, it should be very easy for them to test these things in a closed, safe environment. Situations like these could be simulated with numerous permutations, so it would likely even be superior. Surely something like a pedestrian moving perpendicular into the path of the vehicle could, and should, be simulated in a better way then waiting for it to actually happen.
#2400
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I'll take your word on that, I was just trying to be conservative at pointing out the obtuseness of those who assume that the dash cam recording provides an accurate representation of what would be visible to a human paying attention.