Video of Uber self-driving car accident opens debate on Twitter

This video grab made from dashcam footage released by the Tempe Police Department on March 21, 2018 shows the moment before the collision of ride-sharing Uber's self-driving vehicle and a pedestrian in the city of Tempe, Arizona. (Photo: AFP)


A massive debate over self-driving cars erupted across both sides of the Atlantic after a fatal accident in the US state of Arizona left a 49-year-old dead.

Elaine Herzberg, unfortunately, became the first pedestrian in the world to die in an accident involving a self-driving vehicle when she was hit by a Volvo SUV belonging to cab-aggregator giant Uber on the night of 18 March while crossing a street.

As the debate rages on, the Tempe Police, under whose jurisdiction the incident happened, released a video showing the accident.

The Tempe police said that the Vehicular Crimes Unit of the department is investigating the details of this incident.

“We will provide updated information regarding the investigation once it is available,” they wrote on their official Twitter handle. The Tempe police have said that the victim was walking outside of a crosswalk (pedestrian crossing or zebra crossing).

Before we go any further, have a look at the video captured by cameras installed in the car showing the interior and exterior scenes at the time of the tragedy.

 

The person inside the vehicle was the operator of the car, identified by police as 44-year-old Rafaela Vasquez. The operator’s role is to intervene when needed but allow the cars to run in autonomous mode.

Self-driving cars rely on radar sensors meant to detect pedestrians, cyclists, cars and other obstacles. This means that the car should have detected Herzberg.

Following the release of the video, people on Twitter raised a series of questions. Many claimed that it would have been difficult for even a human driver to spot the lady “who appeared out of nowhere” on the dark street before the car which was running at a speed of 64 km per hour.

 

But there were some who said that the street was not as dark as seen in the video and that it would have been possible for humans to spot the woman. Many said that irrespective of whether the woman was walking outside the crosswalk or the lighting on the street, the car’s sensors should have been able to detect Herzberg.

 

Meanwhile, Uber has expressed grief at the passing of Herzberg and said that it is “fully cooperating with Police and local authorities as they investigate this incident”.

Uber has been operating autonomous vehicles in Arizona since February of 2017 as part of a series of tests.

This is not the first death involving a self-driving car. In 2016, 40-year-old Joshua Brown of Ohio became the first person to die in an accident involving an autonomous car when his Tesla Model S electric sedan crashed into a tractor-trailer in autopilot mode.