AJI wrote: ↑26 May 2019, 15:09
Tommy Cookers wrote: ↑26 May 2019, 12:14
...
if so, will that include or exclude 4 legged pedestrians ?
Here's a reasonably common problem in my area. My friends recently (just over a week ago) wrote-off their brand new Toyota Prado. A cow got out of a paddock and onto the road, at night. No human was injured, but the cow didn’t make it...
Cattle are electronically tagged in Australia for ID, but not for GPS tracking. If the car had known there was a black cow wandering on the road ahead the accident never would have happened. My friend, who I must say is an extremely safe driver, didn’t have a chance. He crested a hill with his wife and two small children on-board and was confronted with a 700kg cow on the road 50 metres ahead. Humans 1, cattle 0. If they were driving a sedan it could easily have been humans -4...
I know that meeting a (black!) cow is a non-foreseeable event. But what was the (officially safe) speed of that car while cresting a hill at night?
I can imagine a well programmed AV dropping some speed when facing a blind piece of road, one for which its sensors have no info yet, to reduce the braking distance there, juts in case. Do they actually do that?!
In my eyes, dropping, say, 30% of your speed, smoothly, for a short moment, is the thing to do. In real life, it is considered dangerous, the (human) driver behind you does not expect you to do that and "things start to happen", i.e. you are likely to get overtaken in the worst spot.
My problem with traffic, and why I hate driving so much is, to some extent, the non foreseeable events.
And that I suck at multitasking and spatial awareness, but that is off topic. Which, by the way, some people learn to prevent with "defensive driving" courses. I can imagine AV vehicles doing defensive driving 100% of the time.
Rivals, not enemies.