Self-driving bus starts taking passengers in U.K. first

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At a demonstration last week, the bus operator drove the bus as usual until he reached a pre-determined point on Edinburgh’s Forth Road Bridge. A light “ding” noise alerted passengers that the driver, Steven Matthew, had switched on the autopilot.

That’s when he gingerly allowed his hands to levitate above the steering wheel — still poised at the ready to seize control of the bus from its computerized driver in case of an incident.

From a few feet away, Matthew still looked like he was driving the bus. Only a closer look made it clear his arms weren’t moving along with the steering wheel.

“The technology I think is brilliant,” Matthew, a 47-year-old operations supervisor, told NBC News. “It stays in the lane, it brakes when it senses other traffic. The only thing you’ve maybe got to worry about is other motorists not knowing what they’re going to do.”

Even if Matthew has complete trust in the technology, as the bus hurtled across the enormous bridge at 50 mph, his abiding presence behind the wheel was reassuring. This bus may need a Matthew not to protect humans from flaws in the technology but to backstop the technology against the flaws of human drivers and pedestrians, experts say.

Safety driver Steven Matthew after he switches the bus onto autopilot driving over the Forth Road Bridge at the Queensferry Crossing.
Safety driver Steven Matthew after he switches the bus onto autopilot driving over the Forth Road Bridge at the Queensferry Crossing.Briony Sowden / NBC News

“The biggest barrier with autonomous vehicles is dealing with people, especially in an urban environment, where people are making decisions on their own,” said Ram Murthy, 48, a professor in the School of Informatics at the University of Edinburgh who wasn’t directly involved in the bus project.

Human drivers always “stretch the rules just a little bit so that they can get by and collaborate with each other,” he said. If roads only had autonomous vehicles, the tech would operate almost perfectly and motor vehicle accidents and fatalities would plummet, Murthy added.

But even if human foibles contribute to technological errors, there is reason for public suspicion. 

Last year, America’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reported “nearly 400 crashes over a 10-month period involving vehicles with partially automated driver-assist systems, including 273 with Teslas,” according to the Associated Press.

The NHTSA cautioned that such figures shouldn’t be used to compare the safety of different automakers because the data doesn’t “weight them by the number of vehicles from each manufacturer that use the systems, or how many miles those vehicles traveled.”

And earlier this year, regulators pushed Tesla to recall more than 363,000 cars equipped with its “full self-driving system” because the system didn’t always adhere to traffic safety rules and could cause crashes. Tesla disputed the regulators’ decision, even if the company went along with the recall.

Stagecoach officials and researchers from Fusion Processing, the company that innovated the CAVStar autonomous driving system, acknowledge that even if the bus route is real, the so-called CAVForth bus project is still just a trial. It is part of a project part-funded by the U.K. Government’s Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles that also involves local transport authorities and a pair of universities.

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An Autonomous bus drives across the Forth Road Bridge between Edinburgh and Fife, in Scotland. Andy Buchanan / AFP via Getty Images

Organizers hope the technology will ultimately reduce human error, leading to a decrease in roadway accidents and deaths. And by decreasing the need for human drivers, organizers hope to reduce costs, thereby making bus systems more accessible to smaller towns and cities that currently can’t afford to offer public transportation.

Each bus bristles with some 20 sensors, cameras and radars, along with a sophisticated satellite-linked global positioning system.

Every thirty minutes, a bus will traverse a 14-mile route that Fusion says includes “a range of complex traffic manoeuvres such as roundabouts, traffic lights, and ‘weaving’ motorway lane changes.”

Jim Hutchinson, Fusion’s CEO, said wary passengers should remember the computer’s advantages over human drivers: The autonomous driver does not have to check blind spots, nor does it get distracted. The sensors never blink.

Fusion and Stagecoach officials say that while the service is still experimental, the buses have hit the road only after extensive testing: the buses have endured ten years of research and development and over 1.1 million miles in tests.

If the trial works, organizers hope to roll out similar technology to four other cities across the U.K., perhaps before the end of the year. The various companies and government agencies behind the project hope wider adoption could spur the kind of regulatory and legal changes that might eventually realize a truly “driverless” bus route.

“We still understand that we need to ensure that, you know, the public come with us on this,” Hutchinson said. “So I think there’s still work to be done on that side of it. But you know, the technology is ready now.”



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