'EVs aren't as loud, so perhaps the sensors need to be tied to an alarm that
could sound when it senses something -- like a child running in the street
... for people to accept that the car is safer'

http://www.technewsworld.com/story/82689.html
Google Fine-Tunes Self-Driving Cars' Kid Perception
Nov 2, 2015  Peter Suciu

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Google last week announced that it has developed technology for its
self-driving vehicles that would be able to detect people in costumes --
presumably children dressed for Halloween.

The company is teaching its cars to drive more cautiously around children
and thus be ready to adapt to sudden and even erratic movement, it said.

Google's engineers are striving to help the cars react, especially as
children's behavior can be unpredictable. The vehicles are designed to scan
for those in costumes or other garb that might make them not immediately
recognizable as a person. 

 Smarter Than People 

 Google's announcement is the latest example of how autonomous vehicles
could be safer than human drivers -- especially at times such as Halloween
when more people are out on suburban streets after dark.

"Autonomous vehicles are probably already safer than half of the drivers on
the road today," said Paul Teich, principal analyst at Tirias Research.

"Autonomous cars have a 360-degree unobstructed view around the car that is
designed to spot for objects and movement," he told TechNewsWorld.

It isn't just that the cars can see in all directions, but that the vehicles
can do so in more wavelengths than what humans can see, Teich said.

"These cars can see visible light and have the potential to see infrared and
radar. Combined, this will allow a vehicle to have the potential to see what
humans would never see," he added. "It is almost a 3-D sense that people
don't have." 

 Quick Reaction 

 The technology also could be programmed to determine potential risks.

"Anticipating and avoiding people is a major component of self-driving car
efforts and will likely (include) an early-warning feature," said Rob
Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.

That could include programs that can react quickly to fast-changing
situations, "like a child chasing a ball into the street," he told
TechNewsWorld.

"Properly programmed, it shouldn't speed and it should be far more capable
of seeing and adjusting to ice, snow and rain. It really comes down to the
fact that humans often drive unsafely," Enderle said, but a machine's
driving wouldn't be impaired unless the system malfunctioned, perhaps due to
a sensor failure or even a hack attack. 

 All Too Human 

 The machines do have an advantage in that the human eye is limited in its
range and field of view, and most people aren't even seeing at 100 percent
of the eye's potential.

"We have to remember a lot of people need glasses, so there is that,"
explained Tirias Research's Teich.

"The other part of it is that people at their peak of abilities are good
when it comes to reaction times and seeing potential dangers, but the fact
is that most of us aren't at that peak for very long but we're still behind
the wheel," he added.

What humans can see may be just part of the issue, noted Susan Schreiner,
analyst with C4 Trends.


"Sound is the other half of it, as in what people on the street hear," she
told TechNewsWorld.

"As we shift to electric vehicles, the cars aren't as loud, so perhaps the
sensors need to be tied to an alarm that could sound when it senses
something -- like a child running in the street," Schreiner explained.
"These are the pieces that need to come together for people to accept that
the car is safer." 
 Different Demographics 


 The acceptance of autonomous vehicles as well as the perception of
potential safety could come down to demographics.

"The older generation will likely savor the human element that comes with
driving, even if many older drivers may not be the safest drivers. As a
result, we may go through a transition period as people begin to accept what
the car can do," Schreiner noted.

To the U.S. customer, safety means crash prevention, said Praveen
Chandrasekar, research director of automotive and transportation at Frost &
Sullivan. Advanced driver assistance systems and automated features
establish greater expectations for standard features that are designed to
avoid crash scenarios by counteracting a driver's risky actions.

"Yet U.S. consumers are not ready to give the vehicle full control at all
times, but rather want the vehicle to take control during stressful
scenarios like poor visibility or bad weather," he told TechNewsWorld.

"As technology advances and consumers are getting more used to these
automated features and initial glitches are solved, and if the vehicle does
support them on stressful situations, the ultimate change in attitude will
be more inclination to adopt these," Chandrasekar added. "Ultimately, the
price will be a huge deciding factor."
[© technewsworld.com]
...
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3301013/Google-teaches-self-driving-cars-drive-slowly-children-dressed-up.html
Google teaches its self driving cars to drive more slowly around children -
even if they are dressed up
2 November 2015




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