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Transportation AI

Driverless Cars Could Force Other Road Users To Drive More Efficiently (newscientist.com) 221

MattSparkes shares a report from New Scientist: The idea that autonomous cars, even in small numbers, can increase fuel efficiency, travel times and safety for all cars on the road will be put to the test on routes around Nashville, Tennessee, later this year. Benedetto Piccoli at Rutgers University, New Jersey, and his colleagues previously used a computer model of a simple circular road with just one lane in each direction, and found that autonomous cars could decrease overall fuel consumption of all traffic by 40 percent, even once adoption of these vehicles had only reached 5 per cent.

The best-case scenarios from these new models "rarely happen" in the real world, he says, but his team still hopes to reduce fuel consumption of all vehicles on the road during the trial -- not just the driverless cars -- by as much as 10 percent. "If you take just the overall cost of the traffic system in any country, and you reduce that by even 5 percent we are talking about billions of dollars," he says.
The researchers have shared their findings in a paper via arXiv.org.
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Driverless Cars Could Force Other Road Users To Drive More Efficiently

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  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:04PM (#62563430) Journal

    Slowing all drivers down will increase fuel efficiency, too.

    • Growing up, I remember the big "55" being highlighted on every spedometer at the time.

      I also remember the indicator being well on the right hand side of "55" most of the time on the freeway and cars still zooming past.

      • Do you also remember the rolling roadblocks?
        Whatever those guys got off the road everybody else went 90 to make up for lost time

    • Slowing all drivers down will increase fuel efficiency, too.

      Yes, but slowing down wastes time.

      SDCs can increase fuel efficiency while saving time by making traffic flow more smoothly.

      For instance, when an SDC approaches a traffic light, it will adjust its speed to reach the light just as it turns green, thus cruising through with minimal braking. All the HDCs behind the SDC will follow along and have the same benefit.

      Fuel efficiency increases because braking is minimized, and traffic flow is optimized as more cars make it through the intersection.

      • For instance, when an SDC approaches a traffic light, it will adjust its speed to reach the light just as it turns green, thus cruising through with minimal braking. All the HDCs behind the SDC will follow along and have the same benefit.

        What is a SDC/HDC?

        I guess it's not a big deal to me...when I'm on the road, especially when highway driving on a long trip, efficiency is not my priority, getting to my destination as quickly as possible is...

        I don't want someone or something impeding my journey.

        I don't

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Darinbob ( 1142669 )

      And increase road rage incidents?

      • by RobinH ( 124750 )
        That's what I was thinking. Driving to work this morning I was driving between 10 and 15 km/h over the limit the whole way, and a woman behind me had to drive up on my bumper and tailgate me for about 5 km before finally passing me in a big rush. Now if I was actually driving right at the speed limit? It would just be a constant stream of frustrated drivers trying to make risky passes on curvy roads the whole way.
        • While tailgating is not safe, neither is blocking the usual and reasonable flow of traffic. You could be ticketed for either offense in most places in the U.S.

          What you're supposed to do in that case is change lanes, or if that is not possible, to find a safe place to pull over.

      • by Amouth ( 879122 )

        yeah - all i can think about is this as a good example

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    • by Immerman ( 2627577 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @10:35PM (#62563658)

      I think "force" is probably the wrong word. If they're talking about what I suspect I doubt most people will even notice what they're doing.

      We've known for decades now what the number one rule for efficient traffic is - you need to minimize congestion, which kills both speed and efficiency. And that is actually *very* simple to do, even with fairly high traffic levels - ants have mastered it by instinct: Every individual strives to remain halfway between the person in front of them and the person behind them at all times.

      That maximizes the resiliency of traffic flow to any disruptions, and prevents the normal speed-killing clusters of high congestion from ever forming in the first place.

      Unfortunately nobody teaches that, and normal human driving behaviors are instead to drive fast until you get stopped by the back of one of those congestion-clusters - which is pretty much the best way to make the clusters as bad, and slow, as possible, as quickly as possible.

      However, even a relatively small percentage of drivers (or autonomous cars) behaving "properly" to maintain healthy traffic flow has a hugely outsized effect on preventing severe congestion, which lets everyone get to their destination faster.

      • > Unfortunately nobody teaches that, and normal human driving behaviors are instead to drive fast until you get stopped by the back of one of those congestion-clusters - which is pretty much the best way to make the clusters as bad, and slow, as possible

        Yep, human nature in traffic is do the worst possible things in terms of congestion. Drivers do NOT behave according to a simple model of rational behavior. Not even close.

        It has been in the real world that when you have two routes or lanes before point A

      • the number one rule for efficient traffic is - Every individual strives to remain halfway between the person in front of them and the person behind them at all times.

        That maximizes the resiliency of traffic flow to any disruptions, and prevents the normal speed-killing clusters of high congestion from ever forming in the first place

        This rule probably works very well where everyone obeys it. However, as soon as someone gets "too close" to the car behind, then that car will get "too close" to the car in front as it tries to keep half-way between the surrounding cars. This will then cascade forwards. Also will cascade backwards as the car behind tries to catch up.

        The effect will dampen a bit, but if the 'non-conforming' driver tries to maintain a constant distance eventually everyone will match that distance.

        • That's why law require a certain minimum distance between cars. Violation of that law is one of the key causes of congestion.
      • by k6mfw ( 1182893 )

        And that is actually *very* simple to do, even with fairly high traffic levels - ants have mastered it by instinct: Every individual strives to remain halfway between the person in front of them and the person behind them at all times.

        Interesting, remind me of this "Why Don't Ants Get Stuck In Traffic?" https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
        There is one thing they can do, that is crawl over a slower ant. However, ants have a socialist system so getting Americans to do anything remotely that might have elements of a "S" system, might as well title that topic as from the good-luck-with-that dept.

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Wednesday May 25, 2022 @05:16AM (#62564218)

        The problem is, humans are slow to react.

        Your reaction time to a standard test might be around 250ms or so, but doing a complex task like driving, it can take 2-3 SECONDS to react. For example - if traffic ahead of you slows suddenly, you will spend about 1-2 seconds just recognizing that fact, then probably another second or two to comprehend what has happened and actually act (like step on the brake). And that's in the ideal case - reaction times of 8-10 seconds from something happening to when action is taken is more "normal".

        This is why you can easily start a brake wave - some guy in front steps on the brakes briefly, causing the guy behind him to do the same but harder because the reaction time gave him less braking time, and now a wave starts that propagates backwards and all of a sudden a few miles back you end up in a traffic jam with no cause.

        On the other hand, autonomous vehicles can perform their processing loop much faster, so slight speed differences between vehicles can be quickly adjusted for without burning up distance so brake application may be avoided, thus keeping traffic at a more constant pace. Plus, it's possible to react far more quickly, so a block of vehicles can move as one big block rather than a bunch of individual vehicles when the light turns green. Surely you've noticed it - the first vehicle moves when the light turns green, but the second vehicle is slower to react and now the first vehicle is on the other side of the intersection while the second vehicle has just started moving - imagine how many more cars could go through if everyone could smoothly accelerate at the same time.

        By driving more consistently and forcing traffic to do the same, this can result in far smoother and faster moving traffic.

        And driving slower can be faster - speeding through doesn't actually save you all that much time in the end - a few seconds to a minute tops. It just "feels" faster because you don't feel you stop as long.

        Especially in city traffic - if two cars constantly meet at the same traffic light, but one keeps speeding to the next light and braking versus just driving at a slower but constant pace, both vehicles are moving through at the same speed.

      • No, that doesn't work for cars.. Congestion builds up because people deaccelerate into it faster than they accelerate out. You could argue people are driving too fast into congestion, but I could even better argue they are not driving fast enough out of congestion.

    • by rew ( 6140 )

      Right! And counter-intuitively: When done right it will on average reduce travel time. (because you increase throughput at congestion points).

    • You know, I completely agree with the frustration about having to change my driving habits when:
      I used to enjoy driving
      I'm a very efficient driver, time and congestion wise
      I am a safe driver (I used to be a VERY safe driver, but there are times when the correct thing is no longer safe)

      I've also come to the conclusion that paying attention to the road ahead, mirrors, other drivers and pedestrians has become a 'chore' for people that they have completely de-prioritized. Where I live, I'd say 5-10% of dr
  • unless the manufacturer pays for the insurance.
    • The cost burden for that would be too high, just consider insurance as part of the car's price. Driverless cars only need to be slightly safer than human to justify putting them on the road. If they resulted in 39,999 deaths instead of 40,000 killed that would be a win. We are paying billions of dollars to stop violent crime, when less than 20,000 people die from crime .. but 40,000 are killed in traffic accidents and it's not considered a big deal.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by PopeRatzo ( 965947 )

        We are paying billions of dollars to stop violent crime, when less than 20,000 people die from crime .. but 40,000 are killed in traffic accidents and it's not considered a big deal.

        Firearm injuries have been the #1 cause of death for children and adolescents since 2019. Motor vehicle accidents are #2.

        https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/... [nejm.org]

        https://www.usnews.com/news/na... [usnews.com]

        • I was speaking about overall deaths. If you want to reduce overall deaths and could choose to ban only one thing. Banning human-driven vehicles would save the most lives by far.

        • Most gun deaths, are due to suicide. And that's every year.

          It truly is incredible in our day and age of sensitivity for all, that we still refuse to acknowledge a serious problem with mental health. Instead, we'll continue to turn a blind eye to the powerful psychotropic drugs most mass killers are running on. How ironic Senator Biden was recognizing the deficiency in mental health in 2007. The end result was the era of Pill Mills and now record-breaking deaths by drugs, twice that of guns. Drug compa

          • The CDC is forbidden from collecting a lot of gun statistics, for political reasons, so what it collects is just based on death certificates and then estimating. The FBI keeps more stats, but only on the crime side of things. We really don't have a nationwide collection for gun injury stats.

            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              The CDC is the "Center for Disease Control and Prevention". They should have absolutely nothing to do with firearms. It's the Left that's trying to call guns a disease and health issue in order to politicize the CDC as a gun control agency. We have the ATF and FBI to collect such statistics.

              • Well, we need somebody to track it. If not the CDC, somebody. We need to know the mechanism by which people die. What are you so insecure about that you donâ(TM)t want it tracked? Besides any time someone hurts themselves or others, it is the result of a failure it the brain. Failure to empathize with the targeted group or person, failure to channel pain, failure of judgement. Of course the brain wiring is responsible.

              • by Sique ( 173459 )
                As the Center for Disease Control, it has to know about all potentially dangerous diseases, and thus it collects causes of illness and of death. One side effect is that the CDC also knows the number of gun inflicted wounds, because they cause illness and death.

                You would have to add rules of enforced ignorance to have the CDC not to know about gun related deaths.

              • But I thought gun violence was a mental illness? Should the CDC care about mental illness? The left wants to ban guns, the right wants to claim that the use of a gun to commit violence is simply a health issue to hand wave away the fact that no one actually wants to solve this problem on either side.

        • Interesting stats, but not really relevant. The firearms-related deaths are almost entirely either criminal violence (mostly gang and drug related) or suicide. Both of those are, one way or another, intentional acts. Even if you could remove guns from the picture, the underlying violence and suicides would remain. If you can't shoot someone, you can still stab them, or hit them over the head with a rock.

          Traffic deaths, on the other hand, are accidents and therefore preventable. Autonomous cars have the po

        • Firearm injuries have been the #1 cause of death for children and adolescents since 2019. Motor vehicle accidents are #2.

          If you take out the suicide numbers from that, that changes it drastically.

      • Insurance companies are already working with car manufacturers to bundle insurance directly into a lease. So it will simply appear that it's included in the cost of your car. They see the end of personal car ownership coming and they are probably right.

    • unless the manufacturer pays for the insurance.

      The insurance will cost about the same whether you buy it or it is added to the price of the car.

      So why do you care?

  • by oldgraybeard ( 2939809 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:12PM (#62563464)
    How about they take pictures of all the cars/faces/plates around them and have all of them act like unmarked rolling police surveillance/control units. Pacing traffic, noting who is speeding, talking/texting on their phone, in a place at a certain time, where they are not allowed to be, all kinds of fun ways to use them. What could go wrong.
    • How about we form driverless car hunting packs and destroy our four wheeled overlords before they have a chance to take over?

      • Won't have to worry about it. Like most things that have value in our cities the vehicle will be tagged, trashed and stripped. The real question is, after the vehicles are trashed who will want to get into one for a paid ride?
  • HAHAHA!

    (clears throat) Yes, the public will fa... ::ppfftf::HAHAHA!

      (Sorry, I just can't finish that one)

  • In a Driverless Car Forcing Other Road Users To Drive differently!
  • within 10 years of widespread driverless cars. Insurance costs will skyrocket for anyone without a self driving car rapidly forcing all but the wealthiest to let the computer drive. It won't matter if you're a safer driver since insurance companies only care about overall statistics.
    • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:39PM (#62563526)
      Why would insurance rates skyrocket? Insurance companies make plenty of money off the current rates. No reason for them to not continue to do so.
    • Insurance costs will skyrocket for anyone without a self driving car

      Why in particular? It's not like driving manually will suddenly become more dangerous. It's likely to become less dangerous.

      • Companies charge what the market will bear. If they can jack rates up on manual drivers, even if it's simply due to reduced competition and bargaining power of the shrinking pool of manual drivers, they will. Insurance companies charge outsize amounts to tobacco users, simply because they can, in a similar dynamic.
        • There's enough competition in the insurance market that if one company charges too much, the other companies will get all the business.

          The reason smokers get charged so much is because their healthcare is more expensive. The insurance companies can charge everyone else less by excluding them.

        • You think the pool of manual drivers will be small 10 years after automated driving comes out? Heh. A big percentage of people can't afford a car that's only 10 years old. Those very people are the ones who are not going to be willing to pay higher insurance rates, because they can't afford it. Insurance companies know they can't get blood from a stone.

  • Traffic Drones (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hashish16 ( 1817982 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:38PM (#62563524)
    I always thought we needed traffic drones to buffer traffic. Most slow downs occurs because of irratic driving that ends up rippling down stream. (I studied traffic theory many years ago in college).
    • I always thought we needed traffic drones to buffer traffic. Most slow downs occurs because of irratic driving that ends up rippling down stream. (I studied traffic theory many years ago in college).

      They tried this in Texas a few years ago. As an experiment, they had variable speed limits to try to buffer traffic. The problem was that people still drove like insane assholes, weaving in and around people that were observing the speed limit. It increased the number of accidents IIRC, and basically wound up making things worse. In the past I've done a lot of interstate driving, and new things like adaptive cruise control have come out. There's nothing more frustrating when you're cruising along at the spe

    • It's mainly the people that are not going with the flow of traffic causing issues. That can both be someone driving significantly faster than everyone else, or significantly slower. Any situation that causes others to have to slow down (speeders can cause this by weaving between cars which brake as a reflex when cut off) or maneuver around others. There are also people who realize they're going to miss their exit and stop in the left lane to let cars pass on their right so they can cross three lanes and

  • [...] a computer model of a simple circular road with just one lane in each direction, and found that autonomous cars could decrease overall fuel consumption of all traffic by 40 percent [...]

    In other news, computer models show decreased fuel consumption when they're simulating spherical cars in a vacuum.

  • You just need to have some countermeasures, maybe projected road signs, projected road lines, radio interference on communication channels.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:56PM (#62563562)

    I just finished a road trip from SF Bay Area to L.A. area and back. (No not Disneyland) I hadn't done it for a while.

    Pretty much the whole way, particularly but not only on I-5, most of the 18-wheel truck traffic was cruising at about 75MPH. That meant the left-lane traffic was typically 80 or more, and often I was driving at 85 to keep optimal distance from other cars. But at that speed I was often passed and I always move to the right lane to let them pass.

    Now stick a self-driving car in there, programmed to honor obsolete concepts such as speed limits. Which on that route is 70. A clump of such cars would very likely frustrate a lot of drivers that would be stuck behind them and the trucks trying to pass them but still be able to see open road ahead. This dynamic might be more pronounced on many metro-area commuter routes. I don't think anyone can predict how that small but dangerous percentage of drivers will react in those conditions.

    • Uh, whose self driving is programmed to follow absolute concepts? The AI can be configured to do whatever you like. In the Tesla FSD beta, you can set the percent above speed limit for example. You can decide if you want your car to drive like a crazy person. Your choice and obviously if you get pulled over for setting the car to break the law you are responsible.

    • I am amazed the road revenue people are not out for their bonuses. And amazed how during high fuel costs, 55-60 is not enforced. Save fuel - easy see those one person in a V8 pickup - they can be taxed at peak hour. Driverless cars work best at public transport terminus/stations for the last 3 miles or so home.
  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @09:57PM (#62563566)

    one foot on the brake and one on the gas Well, there's too much traffic, I can't pass.

    Driverless cars needs to drive with traffic and not at under posted speed limits.

  • Anyone caught on a cell or texting while driving should get an automatic 1 year suspension. Same for first offense DUI.

    Drivers have one responsibility and that is the safe operation of your metal box on wheels.

  • A single lane simulation going around in circles may be an interesting esoteric example, but its conclusion is kind of obvious - slower travel is typically more fuel efficient travel. That said, I thought rolling blockades (multiple cars going at speed limit in all lanes, not allowing anyone to pass) were illegal in most places in the US. Also, IIRC Waymo (Google) said a long time back that they that found blind compliance to speed limits and all official rules of the road was potentially dangerous, akin to
  • To live in a soul-less world where everything is controlled by a machine.

    I physically enjoy driving. It is fun. It is very satisfying.

    • I'd enthusiastically agree if it weren't for the fucking assholes who suck the fun out of driving by tailgating, intentionally driving slow in the passing lane, driving 20 mph or more above the speed limit, brake checking, driving on the emergency shoulder to pass traffic, and cutting in line to merge and slow everyone else down. All of this is just another Tuesday on the Long Island Expressway.

      Some areas, particularly metro areas, should be automated driver only: the overall flow of traffic in dense are
  • Speaking from experience: there are few things harder to model than actual driver behavior. The model they're providing is a pretty wishful guess and is based entirely on an idealized model of a simple circular road. When it comes to drivers, observation > rigorously defined models based on assumptions. The problem is that the assumptions rarely hold.
    • by hardwarejunkie9 ( 878942 ) on Tuesday May 24, 2022 @11:04PM (#62563724)
      Looked into it further: claims are made based on a 20 vehicle simulation of a simple circular track. Assumption is simply that automated vehicles are going to respond better to stop traffic waves. However, in practice, the most common accident for automated vehicles is being rear-ended when they fail to make movements that are expected from other drivers. They might end up creating more traffic waves than they stop when they struggle with more complex environments.
  • SDCs will drive like 80 year old grannies who drive 'too carefully', and will drive exactly the speed limit. Between those two things they'll piss off everyone around them. Then when the SDC fucks up because it's not really capable of handling the task, it'll cause accidents. The whole ridiculous experiment will be a massive failure in the end.
  • The research has already been done. It was done near Eindhoven in The Netherlands. Maybe not with autonomous cars, but with people who agreed to drive the system-recommended speed exactly. (little box in their car).

  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2022 @12:16AM (#62563834) Homepage Journal

    It is NOT up to any driver (or autonomous system) to perform traffic control on another.

    Indeed, this sort of thing is known to be both stupid and dangerous.

  • Just have autonomous vehicles drive at slower speeds and of course fuel economy for cars behind them will increase. Derp.

    Why not block both lanes with slow moving autonomous vehicles? That would prevent passing.

    That would solve the road rage problem too, as you canâ(TM)t intimidate someone that isnâ(TM)t there. You might encourage some potentially nasty treatment of autonomous vehicles, howeverâ¦

  • is a lot of smashed autonomous cars as impatient drivers start to drive like maniacs.

  • by larryjoe ( 135075 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2022 @02:22AM (#62564004)

    In reality, human drivers will tailgate the slow moving car blocking traffic and then try to pass when legal (or even when not legal). That's the reason that two-lane roads (one lane in each direction) allow passing in some situations, because otherwise the road would be a instigator of road rage. That's why the study's assumption of single-lane roads with no passing is not useful.

    • by Chrisq ( 894406 )

      Single-lane roads with no passing rarely exist

      That depends on where you live. In rural areas in many countries they are very common - and yes it is a pain when you get stuck behind a tractor or even a farmer and a dog driving a flock of sheep.

    • It has nothing to do with road rage, some vehicles like big trucks hauling many big loads can't make the speed limit and it gives others a chance to pass that slower vehicle.

      And I don't care what the situation, tailgaters should die in a fire. Slowly. You can be the only two cars on the road for miles and you are doing speed limit + 15 and they are so close a passer by will think you are towing that unsafe tailgater.
  • by jd ( 1658 )

    Cars form a wave function.

    In part, this is because you can't drive at an identical speed to the car in front, so will drive slower than faster where the average matches the car in front. It obviously can't be faster, but equally, it can't be slower because you'd accelerate when the gap starts to get too big.

    However, there's also some latency in the system. And that latency must be cumulative, as you can't react before the car in front.

    And there are a bunch more similar effects. The end result is that cars w

  • Drivers will get pissed at the annoying driving of the SDC, and they will try to get it to crash or otherwise F with it to get around it and past it.

  • It's clear to anyone with moderate road experience that a few people puttering along slows EVERYONE down. I've often wondered that it might not be cheaper and more effective to just give some greybeards back their driver's licenses than to hire 100 more state troopers to hand out speeding tickets.

        This is just automating that process.

  • by DrXym ( 126579 ) on Wednesday May 25, 2022 @06:45AM (#62564396)
    Self driving cars will drive so inconsistently, erratically and slowly that they will cause accidents in other motorists who rear end them or attempt to overtake them.

Marvelous! The super-user's going to boot me! What a finely tuned response to the situation!

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