I'm a lot less inclined to take that attitude in a space where there were 35,000 deaths due to vehicular accident and the most common causes of accidents are distracted driving, drunk driving, speeding, and reckless driving. That's basically "humans," "humans," "humans," and "humans;" I suppose we could spin that by pointing out all the millions of miles per year people drive successfully without killing themselves or each other, but that doesn't change the fact that removing humans from the equation should push the death numbers down further.
Driving is at that special saddle-point of attention-thirsty and tedious that people can be good at, but not perfect; the models of how attention wanes in a tedious environment are pretty solid. It's precisely the sort of thing we should be trying to automate if we want to drive the fatality rate below the current 11 per 100,000 population number in the US.
I'm a lot less inclined to take that attitude in a space where there were 35,000 deaths due to vehicular accident and the most common causes of accidents are distracted driving, drunk driving, speeding, and reckless driving. That's basically "humans," "humans," "humans," and "humans;" I suppose we could spin that by pointing out all the millions of miles per year people drive successfully without killing themselves or each other, but that doesn't change the fact that removing humans from the equation should push the death numbers down further.
Driving is at that special saddle-point of attention-thirsty and tedious that people can be good at, but not perfect; the models of how attention wanes in a tedious environment are pretty solid. It's precisely the sort of thing we should be trying to automate if we want to drive the fatality rate below the current 11 per 100,000 population number in the US.