Los Angeles Times

Tesla’s assisted driving is lacking

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The Holy Grail of selfdrivin­g technology, so its promoters tell us, is to replace the error-prone idiot behind the wheel with a flawlessly discerning and safer system of sensors and software.

By that standard, a new version of Tesla’s Navigate on Autopilot self-driving system is a big step back. That’s the opinion of Consumer Reports, which roadtested a new Autopilot feature allowing Tesla vehicles to make lane changes automatica­lly, without the participat­ion of the driver.

Tesla says the feature makes for “a more seamless active guidance experience.” Consumer Reports begs to disagree. In a review posted Wednesday, it says “it observed the opposite in its own tests of the feature, finding that it doesn’t work very well and could create potential safety risks for drivers.”

All told, CR says, the feature is “far less competent than a human driver.” Said Jeff Fisher, the magazine’s senior director of auto testing, “The system’s role should be to help the driver, but the way this technology is deployed, it’s the other way around.”

The feature aims to give drivers one more bit of respite from managing their cars’ operations by allowing the cars to initiate a lane change without requiring driver confirmati­on. But in CR’s experience, “the feature cut off cars without leaving enough space and even passed other cars in ways that violate state laws. … As a result, the driver often had to prevent the system from making poor decisions.”

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment. Tesla did, however, point CR to its April 3 blog post announcing the new feature, in which it stated, “more than 9 million suggested lane changes have been successful­ly executed with the feature in use.” Tesla drivers, the post said, have traveled more than 66 million miles using the Navigate on Autopilot system, which aims to guide

the vehicle in highway driving “from on-ramp to offramp.” Tesla argues that so much experience tends to “support the validation of Navigate on Autopilot.”

Statistica­lly speaking, however, that’s a flawed argument. Tesla’s 66 million miles of experience, much less its 9 million lane changes, aren’t remotely enough to validate any safety claims that purport to compare to the experience of human drivers. As the Rand Corp. observed in 2016, American motorists drive an average of 3 trillion miles per year and fatalities are relatively rare — the 32,800 deaths annually on U.S. roads amount to only 1.09 per 100 million miles.

Establishi­ng to a statistica­l near-certainty that driverless cars would reduce vehicular fatalities by even 20% would require 5 billion miles of road testing — a record that would take a fleet of 100 test vehicles 225 years to complete if they operated at an average of 25 miles per hour, 24 hours a day and 365 days a year. In other words, a sample of 66 million miles proves nothing.

CR’s experience is another data point suggesting that the gap between today’s driver-assistance features — such as automatic braking on cruise control and assisted lane changing — and fully automated driving without driver participat­ion may be much greater than is estimated by promoters of autonomous vehicles.

There are signs that some Autopilot users may vest the system with more control over their vehicles than is wise: Autopilot was engaged during three fatal Tesla crashes, including on March 1, when a driver was killed in a collision with a semitraile­r. There are no indication­s that either the driver or the Autopilot system took action to avoid the trailer, according to the National Transporta­tion Safety Board.

Tesla cautions that “drivers should always be attentive when using Autopilot”; its standard system has required drivers to confirm lane changes via the turn signal stalk and in some cases requires drivers to have their hands on the steering wheel.

Yet the company’s own terminolog­y hints at a rather more freewheeli­ng approach. Its automated lane-change function can be set to four levels — Disabled, Mild, Average or “Mad Max.”

The mild setting allows lane changes when the car is traveling at a speed significan­tly slower than the cruise control setting; “Mad Max” when the car is just a bit slower than the cruise control speed. That’s not necessaril­y imprudentl­y fast, but calling it “Mad Max” conjures up the wildeyed dune-buggy-riding speed demon of the eponymous movie series — not a character one would wish to share a highway with.

CR’s findings indicate that giving Teslas the authority to make lane changes without driver participat­ion — that is, without confirmati­on via the turn-signal stalk — may be premature. Its testers reported that their vehicles “often changed lanes in ways that a safe human driver would not — cutting too closely in front of other cars, and passing on the right.”

The magazine specifical­ly challenged Tesla’s assertion that its vehicles’ three rear-facing cameras could detect fast-approachin­g objects from the rear better than the average driver. In practice, the system had trouble detecting vehicles approachin­g from behind at high speed: “Because of this, the system will often cut off a vehicle that is going a much faster speed since it doesn’t seem to sense the oncoming car until it’s relatively close.”

In several cases, CR says, the Teslas passed cars on the right on a two-lane divided highway. In Connecticu­t, where the testing took place, that’s illegal and would get the driver ticketed.

In short, while Tesla says its Navigate system aims to make highway driving “more relaxing, enjoyable and fun,” CR found that the lane-change function made the driving experience more stressful.

“Tesla is showing what not to do on the path toward self-driving cars,” said David Friedman, CR’s vice president of advocacy: “release increasing­ly automated driving systems that aren’t vetted properly.”

Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page, or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

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 ?? Chris Walker Chicago Tribune ?? A NEW VERSION of Tesla’s Navigate on Autopilot system can change lanes without driver confirmati­on.
Chris Walker Chicago Tribune A NEW VERSION of Tesla’s Navigate on Autopilot system can change lanes without driver confirmati­on.

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