there is a long way to go to find solutions to ethic problems in self-driving cars . the experiment of “the trolley problem” proved effective in solving driving dilemmas . the first death of a self-driving Uber car set people thinking about ethic problems involved65. The passage is ...
’t buy a self-driving car that could make the decision to kill them as the passenger. that’s silly and irrational, sure—this would be an exceedingly rare situation and overall you are far safer in the hands of a machine than driving yourself—but this finding poses a serious problem:...
A lot ofdiscussionandethicalthoughtabout self-driving cars have focused ontragic dilemmas, like hypotheticals in which a car has to decide whether to run over a group of schoolchildren or plunge off a cliff, killing its own occupants. But those sorts of situations are extreme cases. As...
When a driver slams on the brakes to avoid hitting a pedestrian crossing the road illegally, she is making a moral decision that shifts risk from the pedestrian to the people in the car. Self-driving cars might soon have to make such ethical judgmentson their own — but settling on a uni...
skip to main content the lose-lose ethics of testing self-driving cars in public the true ethical dilemma with driverless cars isn't the trolley problem—it's whether we should be testing them on public streets at all. how, exactly do we feel about unleashing self-driving tech on public ...
In this paper we argue that the introduction of self-driving cars can solve this ethical dilemma. In short the solution to the trolley problem is that a self-driving car must be able to estimate its own operational capability for ... R Johansson,Member,IEEE,... 被引量: 6发表: 2016年 ...
Automated vehicles will eventually outperform their human counterparts, but there will still be circumstances where the cars must make an ethical decision to save or possibly risk losing a human life. The study is especially relevant considering earlier this year a self-driving Uber car struck and ...
the lower the probability of injury for an individual,and this is usually the reason why in the trolley problem\cite{trolley} one chooses to reroute the trolley to save the five people who did so. But for a normal driving car, it is not fair to put passenger in the risk of out of ...
skip to main content the lose-lose ethics of testing self-driving cars in public the true ethical dilemma with driverless cars isn't the trolley problem—it's whether we should be testing them on public streets at all. how, exactly do we feel about unleashing self-driving tech on public ...
A lot ofdiscussionandethicalthoughtabout self-driving cars have focused ontragic dilemmas, like hypotheticals in which a car has to decide whether to run over a group of schoolchildren or plunge off a cliff, killing its own occupants. But those sorts of situations are extreme cases. As the ...