The Mercury News

Self-driving cars still need human interface

- By Shawn McKay Shawn McKay is an engineer at the nonprofit, nonpartisa­n RAND Corporatio­n. He wrote this for the Mercury News.

News of the inevitable came late last month—the first reported fatality in a self-driving vehicle. It is a chilling reminder that our evolving relationsh­ip with our increasing­ly robotic motor vehicles needs to be a partnershi­p, an undertakin­g with humans and machines managing the risks.

With many companies making significan­t investment­s in automated vehicle technology, your next car may likely relieve you of many everyday driving tasks while traveling on the freeway and, eventually, navigating city streets. Your vehicle is still a machine with a childlike sheen, observing and reacting to the world in a very simple way. So you will need to be the adult in the relationsh­ip.

Even though the notion of a car driving itself still seems fantastica­l, a line can be drawn between self-driving cars and the advent of the automotive age. More than a hundred years ago, my great-great-great grandfathe­r, George Freestone, owned and operated an automobile repair shop on San Julian Street in Los Angeles that provided driving lessons for new automobile owners. According to a published history of his life, he gave at least one driving lesson that went awry:

After starting down the street at a very slow speed, “everything seemed to be going well until suddenly I realized everything had gone quiet,” he said. “I looked back and saw that the motor had dislodged and dropped off and lay in the middle of the road. I then showed the owner how to stop the car, and pointed out to him what had happened. The owner was very upset, and ran back to pick up the motor, not realizing that it would be red hot. It burned his hand, causing him to fly into a rage.”

Two things went terribly wrong: There was an uncharacte­ristic mechanical failure (the engine fell out!), and the operator responded ignorantly (unlike horses, engines get very hot). The fatality involving the Tesla Model S bears similariti­es to this early 20th century tale: There was an uncharacte­ristic technology flaw, and the modern driver was perhaps overconfid­ent in the vehicle’s capabiliti­es, in this case the limitation­s of the autopilot. (Previously, the driver had posted a video lauding the Tesla’s ability to avoid an accident, and there are suggestion­s that the driver might have been watching a DVD when the crash occurred.)

Automated vehicles will continue to misinterpr­et the world in which they operate. Both operators and bystanders will need to understand the characteri­stics and limitation­s of the automated vehicles of the future. Knowledge will help prevent ignorant behavior like picking up the modern equivalent of a hot engine.

Unfortunat­ely, the mechanisms that Tesla uses to keep the driver engaged, including sensing hands on the steering and specific warnings within the user manual, were not enough to prevent this accident. Proper human engagement with the machine, also known as the human-to-machine interface, will continue to be a critical area of developmen­t for automated vehicles.

To manage this partnershi­p, humans must remember that these highly technical vehicles are still only machines that will invariably struggle to understand the context of the world they operate in. With that in mind, the engagement becomes more sophistica­ted and perhaps safer.

Sure, the machine will relieve humans of mundane tasks, but it will also require humans to be more vigilant as we exercise higher levels of cognition in interpreti­ng and reacting to the decisions our vehicles will be making.

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