The Asian Age

Uber tests suspended, Mobileye calls for revalidati­on

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necessary to ensure safety in the vehicles. Police and safety regulators are investigat­ing the March 18 fatality in which a woman crossing a wide roadway at night was struck and killed by the Uber self- driving test vehicle. The incident has focused new attention on the safety and validation of such vehicles.

Mobileye said it took the dashboard camera video released last week by police and ran it through Mobileye’s advanced driver assistance system ( ADAS), a building block of even more sophistica­ted full self- driving systems that is currently found in 24 million vehicles around the world.

Despite the low quality imaging from the police video, Mobileye’s ADAS technology was able to detect the pedestrian, Elaine Herzberg, and the bicycle she was pushing across the road “approximat­ely one second before impact,” Shashua wrote in the blog, which was published on Intel’s website.

Uber has not said whether the sensors in its self- driving vehicle detected Herzberg in the seconds before the accident. New developmen­ts in self- driving technology and a host of new entrants in the field wrongly give the impression that “the decadeplus experience of incumbent computer vision experts should be discounted,” Shashua wrote.

“Experience counts, particular­ly in safety- critical areas,” Shashua wrote in a veiled reference to Uber, which only began to develop its self- driving program in 2015.

Mobileye’s CEO has previously argued for a formal model for “provable safety assurances” that all self- driving companies could use to validate the safety of their systems and ensure their vehicles do not cause accidents.

“I firmly believe the time to have meaningful discussion on a safety validation framework for fully autonomous vehicles is now,” Shashua wrote. — Reuters

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