Waterloo Region Record

Asleep at the self-driving wheel

Ford will remove steering wheel, brakes in driverless cars, as testers nod off

- Keith Naughton Bloomberg

As Ford has been developing self-driving cars, it has noticed a problem during test drives: Engineers monitoring the robot rides are dozing off.

Company researcher­s have tried to rouse the engineers with bells, buzzers, warning lights, vibrating seats and shaking steering wheels.

They’ve even put a second engineer in the vehicle to keep tabs on his human counterpar­t. No matter — the smooth ride was just too lulling and engineers struggled to maintain “situationa­l awareness,” said Raj Nair, product developmen­t chief for the Michigan-based automaker.

“These are trained engineers who are there to observe what’s happening,” Nair said in an interview. “But it’s human nature that you start trusting the vehicle more and more and that you feel you don’t need to be paying attention.”

The struggle to prevent snoozing-while-cruising has yielded a radical decision: Ford will venture to take the human out of the loop by removing the steering wheel, brake and gas pedals from its driverless cars debuting in 2021. That sets Ford apart from most automakers including Audi and General Motors, which believe drivers can be counted on to take the wheel if an accident is imminent.

BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen’s Audi plan to roll out semi-autonomous cars starting next year that require drivers to take over with as little as 10 seconds notice. On a scale embraced by the U.S. government, these cars would qualify as Level 3 — more capable than cars where drivers do everything, but short of full automation.

Ford plans to skip that level altogether. The automaker has aligned with Alphabet’s Waymo, which made similar discoverie­s related to human inattentio­n while researchin­g Google’s driverless car.

“Level 3 may turn out to be a myth,” Waymo chief executive officer John Krafcik said of autonomous cars that require human interventi­on.

“Perhaps it’s just not worth doing.”

Ford and Waymo’s views show there’s a rift developing among the creators of autonomous cars over what role — if any — humans should play when cars begin driving themselves. Most automakers believe that, at least initially, people must supplant the robot to avoid crashes in complex situations. Others contend that asking an inattentiv­e human to respond in seconds to a life-ordeath situation is a recipe for disaster.

“There’s evidence to suggest that Level 3 may show an increase in traffic crashes,” Nidhi Kalra, co-director of the Rand Center for Decision-making Under Uncertaint­y, said this week during a U.S. congressio­nal hearing. “I don’t think there’s enough evidence to suggest that it should be prohibited at this time, but it does pose safety concerns.”

A U.S. Transporta­tion Department policy last year adopted the Society of Automotive Engineers automated driving levels. Level 0 vehicles require constant human control, while Level 5 vehicles will need no help from humans. Level 3 is what the SAE calls “conditiona­l automation,” in which “the human driver will respond appropriat­ely to a request to intervene.”

Advocates of Level 3 contend a human backup is required for safety and to allow consumers to become comfortabl­e with technology that will eventually take the wheel from their hands.

“We like the levels,” Scott Keogh, president of Audi of America, told reporters at a conference in Las Vegas this year. “It helps with consumer understand­ing and getting trust built into the marketplac­e, as opposed to going straight to the moon shot right off the bat.”

Next year, Audi will introduce Traffic Jam Pilot, a Level-3 system that allows hands-free driving at speeds of up to 35 m.p.h. the car’s sensors detect a situation that requires human help, it will give the driver 10 seconds to get hands on wheel, eyes on road, foot on pedals. If the driver doesn’t respond, the car will slow to a stop in its lane.

Other automakers, such as Nissan and Honda, have systems coming that will give drivers 30 seconds to prepare to re-engage and that can pull to the side of the road if the car doesn’t detect human hands on the wheel.

“You can even go to sleep and the car can wake you up,” said Amnon Shashua, co-founder and chief technical officer of autonomy supplier Mobileye, which is providing Level 3 systems to Audi, BMW, Honda and others. “You know, waking up for 30 seconds is quite a long time.”

That’s not how Hakan Samuelsson sees it. A person at rest or distracted by email or entertainm­ent can’t be expected to take the wheel quickly and save the day, the Volvo Cars CEO said. No sensor exists yet that can predict far enough into the future to give a driver enough time to prepare to avoid a crash, he said.

“We don’t believe in five seconds, 10 seconds,” Samuelsson said. “It could even be dangerous. If you are doing something else, research shows that it will take two minutes or more before you can come back and take over. And that’s absolutely impossible. That really rules out Level 3.”

Volvo, siding with Ford and Waymo, will deploy a self-driving system in 2020 that won’t require human interventi­on. It’s now being tested as a robot taxi by Uber Technologi­es. Volvo will outfit its self-driving XC90 sport utility vehicle with a steering wheel that tucks away while in autonomous mode but allows its owner to drive manually for pleasure.

“A premium car is one you can use as an office in the morning and then drive it yourself on a nice country road in the evening,” Samuelsson said. “You will never end up in no-man’s-land.”

Legal liability could be driving most automakers to put the wheel in the driver’s hands in an emergency, said Joe Vitale, global automotive leader for consultant Deloitte.

“With a vehicle crash when it’s operating in Level 3, I’m sure manufactur­ers will believe the consumer is responsibl­e because they have their hands on the wheel and they’ve been alerted,” Vitale said. “But I don’t think regulators are going to easily turn over on that issue.”

Volvo has pledged it will accept responsibi­lity for any crashes by its self-driving vehicles. Samuelsson said Level 3 could create confusion over who is legally liable for a crash.

“It should be black and white,” Samuelsson said.

“With responsibi­lity, you cannot tell anybody you are a bit responsibl­e. Either you are responsibl­e or you are not.”

One matter both sides agree on is that too many requests for human interventi­on could wreck the autonomous experience.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Ford will introduce driverless cars in 2021. Testing shows it’s safer if the human is out of the picture, as test engineers are falling asleep.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Ford will introduce driverless cars in 2021. Testing shows it’s safer if the human is out of the picture, as test engineers are falling asleep.

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