What the feds’ investigation into Tesla’s Autopilot means for future of self-driving cars	 krqe.com
  by: Hayder Radha, Michigan State University			 Posted: Aug 29, 2021 / 01:55 PM MDT		 					 / Updated: Aug 29, 2021 / 01:56 PM MDT			   			 			   (THE  CONVERSATION) It’s hard to miss the flashing lights of fire  engines,  ambulances, and police cars ahead of you as you’re driving down  the  road. But in at least 11 cases in the past three and a half years,   Tesla’s Autopilot advanced driver-assistance system did just that. This   led to  11   accidents in which Teslas crashed into emergency vehicles or other   vehicles at those scenes, resulting in 17 injuries and one death.
      The National Highway Transportation Safety Administration has  launched an investigation  into  Tesla’s Autopilot system in response to the crashes. The  incidents took  place between January 2018 and July 2021 in Arizona,  California,  Connecticut,  Florida, Indiana, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Carolina, and Texas. The probe  covers 765,000 Tesla cars – that’s virtually every car the company has made in the last seven years. It’s also  not the first time the federal government has investigated Tesla’s Autopilot.
      As a  researcher who studies autonomous vehicles,   I believe the investigation will put pressure on Tesla to reevaluate   the technologies the company uses in Autopilot and could influence the   future of driver-assistance systems and autonomous vehicles.
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  Another equally important factor contributing to Tesla’s vehicle  crashes is the company’s choice of sensor technologies. Tesla has  consistently  avoided the use of lidar. In simple terms,  lidar is like radar but  with lasers instead of radio waves. It’s capable of precisely detecting  objects and estimating their distances. Virtually all major companies  working on autonomous vehicles, including Waymo, Cruise, Volvo,  Mercedes, Ford and GM, are using lidar as an essential technology for  enabling automated vehicles to perceive their environments.
      By relying on cameras, Tesla’s Autopilot is prone to potential  failures caused by challenging lighting conditions, such as glare and  darkness. In its announcement of the Tesla investigation, the NHTSA  reported that most incidents occurred after dark where there were  flashing emergency vehicle lights, flares or other lights. Lidar, in  contrast, can operate under any lighting conditions and can “see” in the  dark.
      Fallout from the investigation
      The preliminary evaluation will determine whether the NHTSA should  proceed with an engineering analysis, which could lead to a recall. The  investigation could eventually lead to changes in future versions of  Tesla’s Autopilot and its other self-driving systems. The investigation  might also indirectly have a broader impact on the deployment of future  autonomous vehicles. In particular, the investigation may reinforce the  need for lidar.
      Although reports in May 2021 indicated that  Tesla was testing lidar sensors,  it’s not clear whether the company was quietly considering the  technology or using it to validate their existing sensor systems. Tesla  CEO Elon Musk called lidar “ a fool’s errand” in 2019, saying it’s expensive and unnecessary.
      However, just as Tesla is revisiting systems that monitor driver  attention, the NHTSA investigation could push the company to consider  adding lidar or similar technologies to future vehicles. |