Skip to main content

'Phantom’ menace endangers AV passengers, says study 

Projecting a ‘phantom’ image on the road can cause a semi-autonomous vehicle to brake suddenly and endanger passengers, according to a new study. 
By Ben Spencer February 20, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
BGU demonstrates how a phantom image can put passengers in an AV in danger (Source: © Haiyin | Dreamstime.com)

Researchers at Israel’s Ben Gurion University (BGU) say this is because advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) in semi- or fully-autonomous vehicles (AVs) consider these depthless projections as real objects. 

PhD student Ben Nassi says: “This is not a bug. This is not the result of poor code implementation. This is a fundamental flaw in object detectors that essentially use feature matching for detecting visual objects and were not trained to distinguish between real and fake objects. This type of attack is currently not taken into consideration by the automobile industry.”

The ‘Phantom of the ADAS’ project also showed that attackers can fool a driving assistance system into believing fake road signs are real by distinguishing phantoms for 125 milliseconds in advertisements presented on digital billboards near roads.

He says a shortage of vehicular communication systems which connect cars to each other and the surrounding infrastructure is creating a “validation gap”, which prevents AVs from validating their virtual perception with a third party. 

More alarmingly, Nassi warns that remote attacks do not need to be carried out by skilled hackers who exploit the validation gap as the project demonstrated how such an attack can be carried out by projecting a phantom road sign from a drone. 

BGU researchers are now developing a convolutional neural network model that analyses a detected object’s contextual, surface and reflected light, which is capable of detecting phantoms with high accuracy.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Joined-up thinking for future ITS
    May 8, 2015
    David Crawford looks at a US model which, for modest federal funding, is producing substantive results. Outward and upward is the clear message emerging from the US$458,000, 2015 workplan of the US government’s ENTERPRISE (Evaluating New TEchnologies for Roads PRogram Initiatives in Safety and Efficiency) joint funding scheme for ITS research.
  • The benefits of combining enforcement and traffic management
    February 27, 2013
    Jason Barnes considers how combining enforcement equipment with other traffic management technologies might benefit our future – if only the will were really in place to do so. During the ITS World Congress in Vienna in October last year, Navtech Radar and Vysion­ics ITS announced a strategic partnership that would combine the expertise of Navtech in millimetre-wave wide-area surveillance technology with Vysionics’ machine vision-based automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) and average speed measurement
  • Gothenburg to collect road condition data 
    August 9, 2021
    The municipality is working with ViaPM, Nira Dynamics and the Luleå University of Technology
  • TRL to develop C/AV-ready framework
    September 24, 2021
    Aims to assess ability of highway infrastructure to support connected and automated driving