Uber’s use of fewer safety sensors
prompts questions after Arizona crash
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[March 28, 2018]
By Heather Somerville, Paul Lienert and Alexandria Sage
TEMPE, Ariz./PITTSBURGH (Reuters) - When
Uber decided in 2016 to retire its fleet of self-driving Ford Fusion
cars in favor of Volvo sport utility vehicles, it also chose to scale
back on one notable piece of technology: the safety sensors used to
detect objects in the road.
That decision resulted in a self-driving vehicle with more blind spots
than its own earlier generation of autonomous cars, as well as those of
its rivals, according to interviews with five former employees and four
industry experts who spoke for the first time about Uber's technology
switch.
Driverless cars are supposed to avoid accidents with lidar – which uses
laser light pulses to detect hazards on the road - and other sensors
such as radar and cameras. The new Uber driverless vehicle is armed with
only one roof-mounted lidar sensor compared with seven lidar units on
the older Ford Fusion models Uber employed, according to diagrams
prepared by Uber.
In scaling back to a single lidar on the Volvo, Uber introduced a blind
zone around the perimeter of the SUV that cannot fully detect
pedestrians, according to interviews with former employees and Raj
Rajkumar, the head of Carnegie Mellon University's transportation center
who has been working on self-driving technology for over a decade.
The lidar system made by Velodyne - one of the top suppliers of sensors
for self-driving vehicles - sees objects in a 360-degree circle around
the car, but has a narrow vertical range that prevents it from detecting
obstacles low to the ground, according to information on Velodyne’s
website as well as former employees who operated the Uber SUVs.
Autonomous vehicles operated by rivals Waymo, Alphabet Inc's
self-driving vehicle unit, have six lidar sensors, while General Motors
Co's vehicle contains five, according to information from the companies.
Uber declined to comment on its decision to reduce its lidar count. In a
statement late Tuesday, an Uber spokeswoman said, "We believe that
technology has the power to make transportation safer than ever before
and recognize our responsibility to contribute to safety in our
communities. As we develop self-driving technology, safety is our
primary concern every step of the way."
Uber referred questions on the blind spot to Velodyne. Velodyne
acknowledged that with the rooftop lidar there is a roughly three meter
blind spot around a vehicle, saying that more sensors are necessary.
"If you're going to avoid pedestrians, you're going to need to have a
side lidar to see those pedestrians and avoid them, especially at
night," Marta Hall, president and chief business development officer at
Velodyne, told Reuters.
The safety of Uber's self-driving car program is under intense scrutiny
since Elaine Herzberg, 49, was killed last week after an Uber Volvo XC90
SUV operating in autonomous mode struck and killed her while she was
jaywalking with her bicycle in Tempe, Arizona.
The precise causes of the Arizona accident are not yet known, and it is
unclear how the vehicle's sensors functioned that night or whether the
lidar's blind spot played a role. The incident is under investigation by
local police and federal safety officials who have offered few details,
including whether Uber's decision to scale back its sensors is under
review.
Uber has said it is cooperating in the investigation and has pulled all
of its autonomous cars off the road, but has provided no further details
about the crash.
Like the older Fusion model, Uber's top competitors place multiple,
smaller lidar units around the car to augment the central rooftop lidar,
a practice experts in the field say provides more complete coverage of
the road.
The earlier Fusion test cars used seven lidars, seven radars and 20
cameras. The newer Volvo test vehicles use a single lidar, 10 radars and
seven cameras, Uber said.
Since Uber launched a self-driving car program in early 2015, it has
hustled to catch up with Waymo, which began working on the technology in
2009. Uber management moved swiftly and confidently even as some car
engineers voiced caution, according to former employees, in a rush to
get more cars driving more miles.
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A self driving Volvo vehicle, purchased by Uber, moves through an
intersection in Scottsdale, Arizona, U.S., December 1, 2017.
REUTERS/Natalie Behring/File Photo
Seven experts who have reviewed the crash agree that a self-driving
system should have seen Herzberg and braked. She had crossed nearly
the entire four-lane, empty road before being struck by the front
right side of the vehicle. The night was clear and streetlights were
lit.
"Radar is supposed to compensate for (the lidar's) blind spot," said
Rajkumar.
Uber declined to comment on its radar system. Volvo Car Group, owned
by China's Geely, declined to comment. A Ford spokesman said the
company was not involved in Uber’s use of the Fusion or the self
driving technology employed on the cars.
To be sure, there are many possible causes of the crash other than
the lidar blind spot. There could have been a software failure in
the Uber car, said Richard Murray, an engineering professor at
California's Institute of Technology and the former head of
Caltech's student self-driving team.
"But this would be quite surprising since there was nothing else on
the road," he said.
THE BLIND ZONE
An Uber diagram of the Fusion model notes that "front, rear and
wing-mounted lidar modules aid in the detection of obstacles in
close proximity to the vehicle, as well as smaller ones that can get
lost in blind spots."
A diagram of its Volvo version shows a single lidar system on the
roof. In reducing its lidar units, Uber chose to rely more on radar
to detect obstacles that may end up in those blind spots, according
to company statements.
At Uber's September 2016 unveiling of its Pittsburgh self-driving
car operation, it was still using the Fusions, but had a Volvo on
display. Uber staff pointed to the sleekness of the SUV and the
relatively small roof mount with only one lidar system, a more
attractive upgrade from the Fusion, which had a bulkier look with
more sensors attached to the exterior.
A former employee said Uber justified the decision to slim down to
one lidar by saying they "overdid it" with the additional sensors on
the Fusions, suggesting the multiple lidars were unnecessary as Uber
continued to refine its self-driving system.
Uber's decision to move from the Fusion to a much taller vehicle
exacerbated the issue of a blind spot from a single lidar unit, said
former employees, because the lidar now sits up higher on top of an
SUV, further reducing its ability to see low-lying objects - from
squirrels to the wheels of a bicycle or a person's legs.
One former Uber employee involved in testing both the Fusions and
Volvo SUVs said that during a test run in late 2016, the Volvo
failed to see a delivery truck's tailgate lift that extended into
the street, and the car nearly hit it going 35 miles-per-hour.
Uber declined to comment on specific testing incidents, but said its
technology is constantly being updated and improved, and every
incident in the cars is logged and checked out by an engineer.
(Additional reporting by Salvador Rodriguez in San Francisco and
Eric Johnson in Seattle; editing by Joe White and Edward Tobin)
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