AI-driven race cars test limits of autonomous driverless technology

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  • čas přidán 30. 04. 2024
  • Last weekend at the Yas Marina circuit in Abu Dhabi, UAE, the Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League competition took place. While each Dallara super formula car looked like an ordinary racing vehicle, there was one notable difference: they were completely driverless, guided instead by autonomous artificial intelligence software developed by eight university-affiliated teams. A suite of sensors was placed where a human driver would sit, including cameras, radar, lidar, GPS and an inertial measurement unit, along with the computing power to process the data the sensors provided in real-time.
    The challenge for each team was to develop AI software that would allow the cars to perform on the track, completing the course in the fastest possible time, overtaking opponents and making strategic decisions to win races. Once cars are on the track, there is no human intervention allowed. Instead, each car makes its own AI-derived decisions about how fast to go, when to brake, what racing line to take, when to pass its opponents and what level of risk it is willing to expose itself to, which may be higher or lower than for human drivers.
    The hope is that by creating a high-tech test bed with a competitive element and prize fund, driverless AI research will accelerate, leading to trickle-down technology that may become commonplace in future driverless cars, logistics infrastructure, farming and other robotic systems. “The Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League is all about road safety," says Tom McCarthy, executive director of ASPIRE, part of the Abu Dhabi government's Advanced Technology Research Council, which set up the competition. “We believe that there is opportunity for leveraging the technology that has been developed in autonomous robotics and AI to develop the co-piloting capability that we can put into road cars that will prevent accidents occurring,” he says.
    Whatever the outcomes, the teams involved are already excited about future applications beyond racing. “Of course, there’s a research element to this," says Lawrence Walter, team principal at CODE19 Racing, a racing team from Indiana and who are linked to Indiana University's Luddy School of Informatics, Computing, and Engineering. “There’s a lot of interesting things when you compare the performance of AI against the human that can be applied, I think, more broadly to computer science,” he says. Walter hopes the team's Maveric AI could have applications beyond racing and cars in the future. “We know that we can apply the expertise that we have to any problem," he says, adding, “maybe it is climate change. We're not sure exactly where we're focused yet, we just know that our Maveric AI is a very advanced modular system and that we can apply her learning nodes, prediction nodes and perception to a whole deal of great challenges.”
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 39

  • @fallinguy007
    @fallinguy007 Před měsícem +8

    That competition was not even that. That was a test that had backing, let's be real

  • @TheGrahamReaper21
    @TheGrahamReaper21 Před 2 měsíci +20

    Id rather watch children race go carts than watch codes race

    • @daideno
      @daideno Před měsícem

      they stop watching f1

  • @aarrodri
    @aarrodri Před měsícem +5

    I recommend watching the race summary from "stop & go F1" channel. It's hilarious 😂.

  • @chriscantplay...2933
    @chriscantplay...2933 Před měsícem +2

    It’s a long time since I heard anyone make the claim that autonomous driving was going to reduce accidents, and this event could not have been a less opportune time to resurrect it.

  • @SZDPSantos
    @SZDPSantos Před 2 měsíci +6

    The good news about all this is that the millions that get invested into these races, the technology trickles down to normal cars eventually.

    • @zjackshot
      @zjackshot Před 7 dny

      Do you know how much actual car companies invest into features that recognise and react to things on road, its far more than these AI races and they're directly applicable unlike these races

  • @nicookie21
    @nicookie21 Před 2 měsíci +5

    This won't be the future of racing, however it will definitely be interesting to see the progress of this. To everyone saying that this isn't interesting and that it will never replace real racing, it won't, but it's interesting that something like this is even possible.
    For everyone hating, grow up and realize that this will never replace racing, but instead it's an experiment pushing boundaries and limits.

  • @NastyAngel
    @NastyAngel Před 6 dny

    am i the only one who think they're so cute driving by themselves?

  • @dgtldrft
    @dgtldrft Před měsícem

    This is going to get crazy! I'm here for it. Wow.

  • @Kargoneth
    @Kargoneth Před 2 měsíci +2

    Rules for the racing vehicles prohibit top speeds.

  • @mudasir3762
    @mudasir3762 Před měsícem

    Amazing, where do i buy the stock? 😊

  • @powerbreed
    @powerbreed Před 2 měsíci +3

    I wouldn’t watch this shit, the driver is who the fans cheer for not some dumb robot

  • @MrCarburator
    @MrCarburator Před 15 dny

    Imagine running reference qualifying lap humans can attempt to asymptotically approach as the limit for any given conditons. I see the funny failures were just proof that the vehicles were truly autonomous, thumbs up. Laughing at novelty is humanity old trait. Most people laughed safety belts out when Volvo introduced them. The same people who laugh today will be taking back seats tomorrow and some will be offended they got sidelined.

  • @Illegal_Alien84
    @Illegal_Alien84 Před měsícem

    This reminds me of Battle Bots. Probably it's something we will see in the future, but I don't believe it's the future of F1 racing.

  • @massimorosso2515
    @massimorosso2515 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Macchine da 550cv che percorrono 8 giri per 5,5 km di circuito.Unica sopravvissuta ha impiegato 1h😂 grazie alla stupidità artificiale😂😂

  • @ghostbaz12
    @ghostbaz12 Před měsícem

    IndyCars ain't driving their somebody using remote control clickbait

  • @jamesblair9614
    @jamesblair9614 Před 11 dny

    Wow, people are going to be lining up to buy tickets to watch autonomous cars, even better if they are electric, with fake engine sounds and shifts. I think I’ll take my inflatable girl friend.

  • @ivancsapod
    @ivancsapod Před 2 měsíci +1

    Definitely an IT challenge, interesting how far will this get. But, what really would be interesting, for me at least, if they would seat a humanoid robot (like a Boston Robobics type) into a racing car, and there, drive it the conventional way. I say, that would be something...

  • @robh_uk
    @robh_uk Před 2 měsíci +8

    An interesting experiment in human ingenuity and AI? Certainly. The future of racing? Certainly not.

    • @User05199
      @User05199 Před 2 měsíci +5

      I think it is the future. F1 has been becoming more and more focused on entertainment. Without humans in a car you can throw away all the safety rules and create a completely different category of racing focused on entertainment. I dont think we will see this in our lifetime but who knows.

    • @SZDPSantos
      @SZDPSantos Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@User05199 We'll definitely see it within the next 10 years. More than likely they'll add 1 AI car in F1 to race against humans just to try out. This will obviously only happen once they're happy they can trust AI drivers.

    • @Kiwi-rn4pp
      @Kiwi-rn4pp Před 2 měsíci +6

      ​@@User05199 There is no entertainment without the human element, there is no courage, no risk, it is like watching a calculator doing math.

    • @User05199
      @User05199 Před 2 měsíci +2

      ​@@Kiwi-rn4ppI don't think so, entertainment is something that keeps on shifting. Same like people thought animated series wouldn't be a success because humans are needed for entertainment. But here we are 😂

    • @rappar9673
      @rappar9673 Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@Kiwi-rn4pp "There is no entertainment without the human element", I'm sorry but this is wrong, on all types of levels. You need to leave the house and step away from what the screens are feeding you.

  • @flitsies
    @flitsies Před měsícem +1

    This as a sport sounds really boring, not worth the effort, this as a safety thing seems to miss the point completely, many accidents on the roads could be avoided by better road signs, better road making, few pot holes.
    A huge part of why there are still so many accidents on the roads is because many drivers are not held to account for their bad driving, also road rage, people who behave badly for revenge and are not held to account.
    Also the way peopel view accidents with cars are seen as acceptable.

  • @graemepennell
    @graemepennell Před 2 měsíci +5

    When it's fully working, Will be more interesting than nascar I'll bet.

  • @MiG-25IsGOAT
    @MiG-25IsGOAT Před 7 dny

    Ok. This is dissapointing, not the teams you actually did an INSANE job on putting this up in JUST 2 FREAKING MONTHS! Congrats to you all, but the problem is with A2RL actually. Giving them just 2 months to put on an entirely new type of racing is nonsense, what you are going to recieve is that laughable race that sent everyone rolling on the floor laughing. And that is bad for the teams, for A2RL, and for this type of racing.

  • @rappar9673
    @rappar9673 Před 2 měsíci +3

    please eliminate all human factors from racing, the whole thing is a childish, ego-driven, archaic activity. Also, get rid of flags and anthems and all that childish fare, we don't live in medieval times, take your banners someplace else.