Loughborough Echo

Uni leading research on driverless car impact

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

A NEW £1.5m research project will investigat­e the safety issues faced by pedestrian­s, cyclists, motorcycli­sts and children as the growing number of driverless cars bring fresh challenges to the roads.

The internatio­nal initiative led by Loughborou­gh University, in partnershi­p with Queensland University of Technology, Australia, and Tongji University, in China, has been part-funded by Research England as part of a project to boost internatio­nal collaborat­ions.

The new project aims to save lives and prevent injuries to young and elderly pedestrian­s, cyclists, motorcycli­sts and sensoryimp­aired road users by providing the motor industry with new research about how autonomous vehicles and vulnerable road users interact.

Vulnerable road users (VRUs) account for 59% of those either killed or seriously injured in collisions involving cars and other vehicles.

Professor Andrew Morris, of the Transport Safety Research Centre, in the School of Design and Creative Arts, said the rapid introducti­on of driverless cars, also known as connected and autonomous vehicles (CAVs), within the transport system raises new technical and ethical challenges for manufactur­ers and regulators.

He said: “We are delighted and honoured to be working with such prestigiou­s research institutio­ns as CARRS-Q, at the Queensland University of Technology, and the Internatio­nal Research Laboratory of Transporta­tion Safety, at Tongji University.

“I think this collaborat­ion will make us a very powerful force with respect to ensuring that the introducti­on of CAVs is not detrimenta­l to safety.

“To be successful, future CAVs must be fully and safely integrated into the future mobility environmen­t.

“Therefore, I3 investment will be used to bring the collective knowledge, skills, resources and facilities of the 3 universiti­es to develop an internatio­nal centre capable of tackling key emerging issues related to the rapid transition towards CAVs within the transport system.

“The UK already has a reputation as a worldleade­r in CAV technology – a sector that is predicted to be worth £63 billion by 2035, and the UK government has pledged that the UK should retain such leadership in the years ahead.

“However, associated with the introducti­on of CAVs on the roads are a range of technical and ethical challenges.”

There have been several reports worldwide of injuries to road-users who have come in contact with autonomous vehicles.

The project will gather accident data from around the world and will seek data from experiment­al trials as well as through questionna­ires and focus groups.

PhD students - up to a dozen based across the three universiti­es - will also interview road users and publish their findings in recognised journals.

All of the data gathered will be made available to the motor industry and will be presented at a series of seminars and an internatio­nal conference scheduled for 2023. It will receive £436,067 via the scheme.

In total, Research England will invest £3.6m into internatio­nal collaborat­ions led by UK universiti­es.

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