Anyone driving the twists of Highway 1 between San Francisco
and Los Angeles recently may have glimpsed a Toyota Prius with a curious
funnel-like cylinder on the roof. Harder to notice was that the person at the wheel
was not actually driving.
The car is a project
of Google, which has been working in secret but in plain view on vehicles that
can drive themselves, using artificial-intelligence software that can sense
anything near the car and mimic the decisions made by a human driver.
With someone behind
the wheel to take control if something goes awry and a technician in the
passenger seat to monitor the navigation system, seven test cars have driven
1,000 miles without human intervention and more than 140,000 miles with only
occasional human control. One even drove itself down Lombard Street in San
Francisco, one of the steepest and curviest streets in the nation. The only
accident, engineers said, was when one Google car was rear-ended while stopped
at a traffic light.
Autonomous cars are
years from mass production, but technologists who have long dreamed of them
believe that they can transform society as profoundly as the Internet has.
Robot drivers react
faster than humans, have 360-degree perception and do not get distracted,
sleepy or intoxicated, the engineers argue. They speak in terms of lives saved
and injuries avoided — more than 37,000 people died in car accidents in the
United States in 2008. The engineers say the technology could double the
capacity of roads by allowing cars to drive more safely while closer together.
Because the robot cars would eventually be less likely to crash, they could be
built lighter, reducing fuel consumption. But of course, to be truly safer, the
cars must be far more reliable than, say, today’s personal computers, which
crash on occasion and are frequently infected.
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