Times Colonist

Self-driving cars a boon for the disabled

- MARISA ENDICOTT

As self-driving cars move toward becoming a reality, many blind or aging people and those with disabiliti­es see a new opportunit­y for mobility approachin­g.

Advocates are pushing manufactur­ers and regulators to ensure that people with disabiliti­es are included in the planning and developmen­t of automated technology and regulation.

“Our desire is to be in that same class of consumers with people who are already on the roads,” said Parnell Diggs, a board member at the U.S. National Federation of the Blind. “If there’s an autonomous car, there needs to be a means by which a blind person can operate that car as well.”

Kenneth Joh, a researcher at the Texas A&M Transporta­tion Institute who also serves on the U.S. advisory Transporta­tion Research Board, said that both people with disabiliti­es and the manufactur­ers would benefit from including the disabled and elderly in the debate about the technology — and not just from some sense of social equity.

“It would behoove the auto industry — auto manufactur­ers — to certainly keep the elderly and the disabled in mind, as a growing proportion of the American population are aging baby boomers,” he said.

Already, there are worrisome signs that the technology will not be the boon for the disabled that it could be.

Last month, Chris Urmson, director of Google’s self-driving cars project, told the U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee that Google is disappoint­ed by California draft regulation­s released in December. The rules dealt with some levels of automation in cars but exclude fully self-driving cars, despite strong public support, especially among people with disabiliti­es, Urmson said.

Varying degrees of automated technology already exist in cars for sale to the public, from automatic braking to lane correction, but fully automated vehicles still are operated only by test drivers.

According to the testimony before the Senate committee, Google has a fleet of 33 prototypes that require no human interventi­on and 23 modified SUVs. Each of Google’s self-driving prototypes has a removable steering wheel and pedals.

At an autonomous car conference in Detroit last month, U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion chief Mark Rosekind said self-driving cars had potential social benefits:

“They promise new mobility options to those who have missed out on the benefits of a century of automotive history, including people with disabiliti­es, elderly drivers and groups at an economic disadvanta­ge.”

Diggs, who is blind, agrees and wants to make sure these communitie­s’ needs are incorporat­ed into original vehicle designs and not introduced later on or only as special retrofitte­d models.

In a way similar to how settings can be enabled on iPhones or computers to accommodat­e the blind, the technology can be built into the interface for autonomous vehicles, he said in a phone interview. Cars can be programmed to describe the field of vision to a blind driver and send warnings about tight turns or obstacles through vibrations and other triggers.

Diggs spoke, along with other interest groups and members of the public, at a daylong hearing on automated vehicles held by the highway safety administra­tion — NHTSA — this month in Washington.

There are many technologi­cal advances to discuss.

NVIDIA, a company based in Santa Clara, California, that designs graphics processing units, has developed a computer for selfdrivin­g cars that uses artificial intelligen­ce to learn from new traffic situations and share that informatio­n with other cars using the same technology.

Still, heightened expectatio­ns for self-driving cars are likely to be unrealisti­c at this point, cautioned Steven Shladover, one of the founders of the California PATH Program, a collaborat­ion between government agencies and academic institutio­ns to improve highway capacity, efficiency and safety through technology.

“This is where, unfortunat­ely, the disabled community has been seriously misled by people into thinking that somehow they’re going to have automated vehicles driving them wherever they want to go in the near future,” he said. “That’s just not going to be feasible.”

When it comes to aging people and those with disabiliti­es — even among those who once held driver’s licences — each person’s impairment is different, and determinin­g who can use which cars will present a “nightmare of complexity,” Shladover said.

NHTSA is crafting federal guidelines for automated vehicles that are expected to include recognitio­n of the needs of blind people and those with other disabiliti­es. Many at the Washington hearing voiced safety concerns, pointing to crash and malfunctio­n reports from trial runs.

“People disagree about how fast it might happen, but I think that technology has proven that it will happen one day,” said Diggs, the advocate for the blind. “When that time comes that there actually are cars on the road that are reliably capable of navigating without any interventi­on from the driver, we intend to be part of that group.”

 ?? LIPO CHING, TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE ?? Jessie Lorenz, who is blind, touches the two-seater prototype of Google’s self-driving car at Google headquarte­rs in Mountain View, California.
LIPO CHING, TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE Jessie Lorenz, who is blind, touches the two-seater prototype of Google’s self-driving car at Google headquarte­rs in Mountain View, California.

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