Should your self-driving car kill you to save others?

Discussion in 'Intelligence & Machines' started by Plazma Inferno!, Jun 24, 2016.

  1. river

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    17,307
    Isn't the idea of self driving cars , a neither scenario would actually happen ?

    Otherwise why have a self driving car in the first place ?
     
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  3. billvon Valued Senior Member

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    Close to correct. Autonomous vehicles will greatly reduce the odds of both, such that there won't be any "who should I kill?" decisions to make.

    Again, you could come up with some bizarre scenario where aircraft autopilots could make such moral decisions. Do they? No, because the call to make such decisions never happens.
     
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  5. river

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    17,307
    Man that is alot of decisions that this car can not make .

    To me this is analogous to auto-pilot on a aircraft . But it is not perfect .

    Auto-pilot has failed , through tech. And Human error .
     
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  7. billvon Valued Senior Member

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    The list of decisions that a car cannot make is almost infinite.
    Absolutely. And AI drivers will fail as well. The goal is to get that failure rate to way below the human failure rate.
     
  8. river

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    17,307
    Agreed

    But where does this put HUMANITY in the ability to think and be aware of ones enviroment ?
     
  9. billvon Valued Senior Member

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    ?? The same place they always were. Having good AI drivers does not make humans less able to think.
     
  10. iceaura Valued Senior Member

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    Nope. Those situations are beyond the control of the AI, and they will happen frequently for the entire foreseeable future in my geographical region.

    Again: the decision involves probabilities, not certainties. Phrase it as "which risks should I take?".

    And the changes involved in reducing their frequency will - prediction - involve significant changes in the environment in which AI vehicles operate. The low fruit of AI improvement or adaptation is apparently nearly all picked, and the AI folks are already - in my newspaper, etc - talking about adapting the highways, vehicles, rules of the road, and human behavior, to the needs of the AI.
     
  11. gamelord Registered Senior Member

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    673
    If I had looked up the guys name on Wikipedia, I would not have spelled it incorrectly. Time to do deductive reasoning.

    Second, let me ask if you even know what Pacejkas formula is or why it is needed.

    "First off, Pacejka's formulas apply to design of tires, and are often used in driving simulators to model the effects of friction. They have zero to to with collision avoidance. "

    So models of friction have "zero to do with collision avoidance". Good high quality stuff right there.

    You should become CEO of ACME, and design cars that send people careening off the edges of hills in a hilarious and cartoon manner.

    Depends. Are we talking about autopilot cars, which allow you to steer in an emergency, or full out, full-crazy, steering-wheel-less, brake-pedal-less padded rooms.
     
  12. TheFrogger Banned Valued Senior Member

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    2,175
    Shortly we will be without keys to our houses. I doubt it will be fingerprints: they could be lifted from a glass. Perhaps retinal scanning, or D.N.A.?
     
  13. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    18,935
    I have no keys to my house. Haven't for about 10 years. Since I got fed up with the kids losing their keys.

    It's a combo lock.

    I have a key for my car, and a key for my boat.
     
  14. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    Well let's be clear: adapting them for the safety of humans.

    A change that makes it easier for AI but does not, ultimately, save property and lives, is not useful.
     
  15. river

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    17,307
    I guess that not all of us enjoy driving ? I do
     
  16. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    I enjoy driving - when its not downtown rush hour.
     
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  17. iceaura Valued Senior Member

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    It almost certainly would make them less able to drive well.
    The logic will be: AI saves property and lives. But AI does not work well in the current circumstances. So we change them - get the AI - and enjoy the benefits of the saved property and lives.
     
  18. DaveC426913 Valued Senior Member

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    Which is a good thing. Right?
     
  19. iceaura Valued Senior Member

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    The logic? As far as it goes.
    Notice that there are no intrinsic limits on what kinds of changes will be made in what circumstances, or how they will be made.
     
  20. gamelord Registered Senior Member

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    673
    Yes, lets all put our faith in the hands of AI, and all the good people of google and facebook who know whats best for us!

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  21. TabbyStar Registered Member

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    I come from an automotive machinery background (automation, robotics, presses, etc). Many of these systems had workers. Safety and osha requirements were always #1. These systems likely differ from autonomous car systems being developed. However, I would hope some practices will follow or flow over.

    In an automotive tooling (or machinery) system...decisions are not made like some have posited for auto cars. Systems are designed to only operate with design conditions met (sensors, etc). A deviation from that (when humans are present) is considered a hazard. A hazard condition is never given choice to choose (the plc soft & hardware architecture). A hazard is a hazard and considered an "E-Stop" condition. No if, ands or buts! You move to a zero energy state and prevent further motion.

    Due to equipment size and speeds, sometimes an E-stop and zero energy condition cannot be achieved instantaneously. In that case, you are allowed to "Control Stop" equipment by only supplying energy to devices needed for the controlled stop (or decelerating stop). Emergency brakes would be an example while servo drive motors would not. The point is to, when a hazard is detected, you get to "Zero" energy as quickly as possible.

    How does the above automotive equipment operation relate to current autonomous cars? I can only speculate that the same ideas apply. If a car is in motion and detects a hazard, or hazards, no decisions will be made by a computer (or plc). Instead, immediate power to servo drives will be cut. As well as all other energy devices except controlled stoppage devices like brakes. I can speculate that possibly, low dc voltage power will remain for passenger escape paths (power windows for example). Other than that, the vehicle should get to a zero energy condition! This would not allow a decision by a computer and then allow power to a device, like steering, to swerve post hazard detection. That is risky engineering...allowing further or additional powered motion while a hazard is detected. Again, move to a zero energy state...not detect and allow motion or energy usage.

    Hopefully this is all true for these systems. Courts of law are very punishing when it comes to lack or disregard of human safety. If a car actually chose one life over another I think society would be in an uproar. It is safer, in my opinion (with multiple hazards detected), to simply shut everything down and let things play out as they may. Implementing "Zero energy" practices, during emergencies, has held up well in courtrooms for robotic equipment (Nachi, Kuka, Motoman, Fanuc, etc). I think it could be for autonomous cars too!

    Thank you all for letting me share my experience. I am retired and have no active role in autonomous vehicle development. My experience is strictly based upon automated machinery, with or without humans in the vicinity

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  22. Jeeves Valued Senior Member

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    5,089
    You already have. You take all the convenience of technology for granted, don't even think about it, just buy every new effort-saving thing that comes along, let computers regulate everything from hydro to traffic lights, your work life and social life, and then get all het up over your loss of autonomy three weeks after the last row-boat cast off. You wouldn't have enjoyed rowing - ask any galley-slave.
     
  23. Benson Registered Senior Member

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    230
    It'll hit the brakes, nothing more.
     

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