[SystemSafety] Autonomously Driven Car Kills Pedestrian

Smith, Brian E. (ARC-TH) brian.e.smith at nasa.gov
Thu Mar 22 14:45:56 CET 2018


Mario,

I hand’t come across the RAND report.  Many, many thanks for passing it
on.  I found this quote from page 3 kind of makes the point…

To demonstrate that fully autonomous vehicles have
a fatality rate of 1.09 fatalities per 100 million miles
(R=99.9999989%) with a C=95% confidence level, the
vehicles would have to be driven 275 million failure-free miles.
With a fleet of 100 autonomous vehicles being test-driven
24 hours a day, 365 days a year at an average speed of 25 miles
per hour, this would take about 12.5 years.


What I love about this “social media” platform for system safety is that
so many smart folks chime in, share information and reports, and make our
community greater than the sum of its parts.  There’s also a nice spirit
among the group.

Brian

On 3/22/18, 2:39 AM, "systemsafety on behalf of Mario Gleirscher"
<systemsafety-bounces at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de on behalf of
mario.gleirscher at tum.de> wrote:

>Nice estimation (it even matches my gut feelings :). Surely we are
>talking about 1.18E-8 when driving under any thinkable adverse
>condition, off-road, backwards, without light, with broken cars, through
>roadworks, non-cooperative road participants, whatever ... right? All
>stuff for which (by public consensus) responsibility is in the hands of
>the driver.
>
>Question 1: Just curious, did you compare it with what they used in
>
>Kalra, N. & Paddock, S. M. Driving to Safety: How Many Miles of Driving
>Would It Take to Demonstrate Autonomous Vehicle Reliability? RAND Corp.,
>RAND Corp., 2016
>
>?
>
>Question 2: Does anybody of us know exactly about the testing conditions
>_in the field_? By exactly, I mean _exactly_.
>
>I suggest those conditions do not even in the slightest sense match with
>what is found on non-lab/non-instrumented streets. According to my state
>of knowledge, no one seems to properly discuss that, instead governments
>seem to be more declining regulatory opportunities (I am not talking
>about ISO 26262 v2 which is of course not supposed to play a relevant
>role in AV regulation).
>
>I am insisting on _exactly_, because when selling AVs, then testing on
>public land might grant the public the legal right to know all about the
>testing conditions (I am not just talking about the Waymo safety
>report). This would ultimately mean, that we would have the legal right
>to look into the implementations of each and every AV vendors field test
>procedures.
>
>Happy to know if that makes sense?
>
>Mario
>
>
>On 22.03.2018 08:44, Peter Bishop wrote:
>> Based on the data, we could reject the hypothesis that Uber is as safe
>> as human-driven (1.18E-8) with 99.998% confidence.
>> 
>> And we could reject the hypothesis that Uber is better than 1 in a
>> million miles with 91% confidence.
>> 
>> So they have quite a way to go.
>> 
>> Peter
>> 
>> On 21/03/2018 23:29, Smith, Brian E. (ARC-TH) wrote:
>>> Note sure if such a comparison would pass muster statistically.  As of
>>> 2015, for human-driven passenger cars here in the U.S., there were
>>>about
>>> 1.18 fatalities per 100 million Vehicle Miles Traveled (VMT).  Both the
>>> numerator and denominator are large enough to make the ratio reliable.
>>>
>>> In 2017, driverless cars accumulated only about 485,000 miles of
>>>testing
>>> here in California.  If the single Arizona accident had happened in my
>>> state, CA, then the rate would be 1 fatal accident every 485,000 miles
>>>for
>>> ³autonomous² vehicles or ~200 times greater than for human drivers.
>>>But
>>> the numerator is too small to be statistically reliable - basically
>>> fatalities are too rare at this time.  Yes/no?
>> 
>



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