USA TODAY US Edition

Tesla Autopilot used mostly on highways, MIT study finds

But consumer groups say name misleading

- Marco della Cava

SAN FRANCISCO – Tesla’s innovative and controvers­ial Autopilot software — which powers the partially self-driving features of its electric cars — is most often used for highway driving, according to the initial findings of an MIT study using volunteer owners.

The research, shared at a conference Wednesday in Cambridge, Mass., came a day after the latest crash of a Tesla using Autopilot and as two consumer groups renewed criticism of the software’s name and marketing, which they say dangerousl­y misleads drivers.

Launched in 2015, the software Tesla CEO Elon Musk once said could be “safer than humans” is receiving more scrutiny as the number of Teslas on the road increase and other automakers unveil their own, partially autonomous vehicles.

The Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology, in an on-going study of 34 Tesla owners who volunteere­d for the project, found Autopilot was used during 36% of the miles driven by the 22-car test group (some cars are owned by couples).

“That it’s actually being used quite often by most drivers jibes with what Musk has said,” Bryan Reimer, research scientist in the MIT AgeLab and associate director of MIT’s New England University Transporta­tion Center, told USA TODAY.

Drivers are most likely to use it for highway-speed driving, with the next biggest cluster between 25 and 45 miles per hour, Reimer said in an ad- dress Wednesday to the New England Motor Press Associatio­n’s annual tech conference.

Some Tesla owners adore their cutting-edge tech sedans but never engage Autopilot, but most are so enamored of the semi-autonomous features that they use them regularly to take some of the monotony out of driving.

Reimer says that interviews with participan­ts in other research test groups show a “glaring gap” in the understand­ing of automation and safety technology. He says it demands an increase in driver education on the part of stakeholde­rs such as automakers, dealers and perhaps even licensing authoritie­s. That confusion may have played a role in some of the recent crashes involving Teslas on Autopilot.

The latest one happened Tuesday in Laguna Beach, Calif., where a Model S hit a parked police car. In an earlier Utah crash, the driver — who sustained only a broken ankle after hitting a stopped fire truck at 60 mph — was looking at her phone and disengaged from driving for 80 seconds before impact. In March, the driver of a Model X died after his Autopilot-enabled car steered into a highway divider in Mountain View, Calif.

In each case, Tesla responded by reminding consumers the system is not meant to turn the vehicle into a self-driving car and that it requires constant driver oversight. But Musk’s enthusiast­ic forecast for the capabiliti­es of Autopilot, as well as its name, often override those admonition­s, two consumer groups say.

Consumer Watchdog and the Center for Auto Safety held a press conference in Los Angeles on Wednesday to urge state and federal regulators to push Tesla to rename Autopilot and possibly require that it be tested further.

“People relying on Tesla (Autopilot) are getting killed, and that’s what we’re trying to stop,” said John Simpson, privacy and technology project director at Consumer Watchdog.

Simpson said the two groups are urging California Department of Motor Vehicles officials to investigat­e how the electric automaker’s claims about the technology match up to Autopilot’s reality.

Jason Levine, executive director of the Center for Auto Safety, said the consumer groups also are asking the Federal Trade Commission to look into what they call “dangerousl­y misleading and deceptive marketing practices” associated with Autopilot.

“Tesla has captured the imaginatio­n of the buying public with cars pitched directly to consumers by a celebrity CEO,” Levine said. “But the software and hardware (Autopilot uses radar and cameras to scan the road ahead) needs to be improved or the name has to be changed. These recent deaths should give politician­s pause.”

 ?? LAGUNA BEACH POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? A Tesla that the driver said was in Autopilot mode struck a parked police vehicle in Laguna Beach, Calif., on Tuesday.
LAGUNA BEACH POLICE DEPARTMENT A Tesla that the driver said was in Autopilot mode struck a parked police vehicle in Laguna Beach, Calif., on Tuesday.

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