Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Waymo, Nexar present AI-based study to protect ‘vulnerable’ road users

waymo data vulnerable road users ml still  1
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Robotaxi operator Waymo says its partnership with Nexar, a machine-learning tech firm dedicated to improving road safety, has yielded the largest dataset of its kind in the U.S., which will help inform the driving of its own automated vehicles.

As part of its latest research with Nexar, Waymo has reconstructed hundreds of crashes involving what it calls ‘vulnerable road users’ (VRUs), such as pedestrians walking through crosswalks, biyclists in city streets, or high-speed motorcycle riders on highways.

Recommended Videos

“By leveraging over 500 million miles of Nexar’s driving data, we’ve been able to capture a wide range of driving events and environments, providing a more comprehensive picture of VRU safety than ever before,” Waymo says in a blog on its website.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration estimates that in 2022 alone, 7,522 pedestrians were killed and more than 67,000 were injured in the U.S.

Yet, Waymo says data on collisions with VRUs remains scarce compared to vehicle-to-vehicle collisions, as many incidents do not get reported to the police or insurance companies.

Besides its own driving fleet, Waymo says other autonomous driving companies can use the collected dataset to evaluate an automated system’s performance in simulations ahead of deployment.

So far, Alphabet-owned Waymo operates the only functioning robotaxi service in the U.S., with a fleet of about 700 self-driving vehicles already on the road in Phoenix, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Rival services still under development include General Motors’ Cruise, Amazon’s Zoox, and Tesla’s Robotaxi.

Cruise had to stop operations last year after one of its vehicles struck a pedestrian. And in October, regulators opened an investigation into 2.4 million Tesla vehicles equipped with its full-self driving (FSD) software following three reported collisions and a fatal crash.

Tesla’s self-driving technology relies on multiple onboard cameras to feed machine-learning models that, in turn, help the car make decisions.

Meanwhile, Waymo’s technology relies on premapped roads, sensors, cameras, radar, and lidar (a laser-light radar).

Nick Godt
Freelance reporter
Nick Godt has covered global business news on three continents for over 25 years.
Uber to bring robotaxis to its ridesharing app via Cruise deal
A passenger getting into a Cruise robotaxi.

Uber and autonomous car specialist Cruise are teaming up to offer robotaxi rides starting as early as next year.

Ridesharing giant Uber announced the multiyear partnership on Thursday, saying it will use Cruise’s modified Chevy Bolt vehicles for the service.

Read more
Waymo robotaxi attacked and set on fire in San Francisco
Waymo Jaguar I-Pace electric SUV

A Waymo self-driving car was set upon by vandals in San Francisco on Saturday evening.

According to footage and eyewitness reports of the incident, the attackers graffitied the car before smashing its windows and throwing fireworks inside. The vehicle then caught fire and burned before fire crews arrived to extinguish the blaze.

Read more
Beleaguered robotaxi startup Cruise lays off quarter of workforce
A Cruise autonomous car.

Beleaguered autonomous car startup Cruise has laid off 900 workers, equal to about a quarter of its workforce. The news comes a day after nine executives were also dismissed.

The General Motors-backed firm has suffered a series of setbacks in recent months, triggered by an accident on the streets of San Francisco in October when one of its self-driving cars came to a halt on top of a woman, pinning her to the ground just moments after she’d been hit by a human-driven car.

Read more