Skip to main content

Washington Post game highlights AV flaws

Mind the kangaroos! That is among the more surprising suggestions in a new entertainment which purports to illustrate the pitfalls of autonomous vehicles (AVs). US media giant The Washington Post has created a short interactive game which “shows readers how autonomous cars function and breaks down the technology to educate viewers about their limitations and challenges”. These include sensor blind spots and confusion over what other road users are about to do. The five-minute game takes the form of a jou
September 11, 2019 Read time: 2 mins

Mind the kangaroos! That is among the more surprising suggestions in a new entertainment which purports to illustrate the pitfalls of autonomous vehicles (AVs).

US media giant The Washington Post has created a short interactive game which “shows readers how autonomous cars function and breaks down the technology to educate viewers about their limitations and challenges”. These include sensor blind spots and confusion over what other road users are about to do.

The five-minute %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external game false https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/business/how-does-an-autonomous-car-work/ false false%> takes the form of a journey in an AV to the airport, with the user able to take over the controls. The accompanying %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external article false https://wapo.st/2m1L0Gu false false%> - ‘How does an autonomous car work? Not so great’ - points out the problems (familiar to the ITS industry) of operating in a mixed traffic environment, including issues such as safety, insurance and liability.

As well as pointing out that AVs have ‘read’ wrongly the colour of traffic lights or failed to stop for broken-down vehicles, the game also features a kangaroo which bounces towards the vehicle.

“Despite how much engineers train their self-driving cars, there’s always the possibility they’ll encounter something unexpected,” the Post says. During a 2017 test in Australia, a car detected a kangaroo but “was confounded by its unusual hopping habits”.

The Post says that 1,400 self-driving vehicles are being tested in 36 states of the US as well as the District of Columbia. It quotes Adam Scow from Consumer Watchdog saying a lack of federal regulation on testing could “lead to disaster”.

Try the %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external game false https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/business/how-does-an-autonomous-car-work/ false false%>yourself here.

Related Content

  • Driven consortium aims to trial AVs in London before Christmas
    November 28, 2018
    The Driven consortium, led by software provider Oxbotica, hopes to trial a fleet of autonomous vehicles (AV) in London before Christmas following successful ongoing tests in Oxford. The vehicles will map streets in the London Borough of Hounslow as part of the consortium’s plans to run a fully autonomous fleet between both cities in 2019. Oxbotica has equipped the vehicles with its autonomous software, radar, lidar sensors and onboard computers and cameras. The fleet will gather data on the contents of
  • Finland leads the MaaS debate at London conference
    February 20, 2017
    Finland’s revolutionary attempts to change how public transport is provided, funded and managed will be top of the agenda at a ground-breaking mobility as a service (MaaS) conference in London on 22 and 23 March. The MaaS Market – Concept to Reality conference will feature keynote presentations from Anne Berner, Finland’s forward-thinking Minister of Transport, and Sampo Hietanen, CEO of MaaS Global. MaaS exploits developing technologies to allow populations to plan and buy all-inclusive transportat
  • Limited places remaining for FIRM15 infrastructure meeting
    March 31, 2015
    The FEHRL Infrastructure Research Meeting 2015 (FIRM15) will be held on 22 and 23 April 2015 at the Diamant Centre in Brussels, Belgium. Held every two years, for the first time FIRM15 is opening up to all transport modes with speakers and participants from the rail sector. With the theme of ‘Innovative maintenance of Transport Infrastructure: Faster, cheaper, more reliable, safer and greener’, FIRM15 aims at mapping the problems and challenges of innovative maintenance of transport infrastructure;
  • C/AV planning turns to business cases, says DfT
    July 9, 2019
    Darren Capes, DfT ITS lead, said projects are working on the business case to understand the benefits of C/AV technologies and what the issues may be. He was speaking at the ITS (UK) Connected Vehicle Forum in Birmingham, where Zenzic - an organisation created by the UK government to accelerate self-driving technology - explained its roadmap to 2030 implementation, summarising co-ordination efforts and project management. If efforts are not coordinated, it may take another 50 years for the technolog