The challenges of automated and connected driving Tülin Baysal - Robert Bosch GmbH Project Manager Automated Driving Series development TITLE
The challenges of automated and connected driving
Benefits of self-driving cars Gain in productivity Improved safety Higher fuel efficiency Reduced congestion Democratization of mobility 56 minutes per day freed up for other uses Allow all age ranges to be mobile Up to 39% improvement in highway fuel economy Reduction in motor vehicle accident rates 80% improvement in traffic throughput
Two main market areas are emerging Autonomous evolution Mobility revolution Incremental change Car-sharing movement SAE- level Steering / acceleration / deceleration Environmental monitoring Fallback System capability 5 System All use cases 4 Defined use cases 3 Driver 2 1 Driver and system None Autonomous Revolution Evolution Driver individual shared
The car has to mirror a driver’s abilities
Near-range cameras Long-range radar rear Mid-range radar rear Ultrasonic sensors Stereo-video camera Mid-range radar Long-range radar Lidar
Accurate localization enabled by Bosch road signature
The driver is no longer the fallback solution
Different layers of security make vehicles safe and secure Secure individual ECU Secure in-vehicle network Secure E/E architecture Secure connected vehicle
The HMI defines the relationship between car and driver
Real-world field data is the key for remote validation
Automated driving is “Invented for life” Automated driving … is coming gradually. will increase road safety and improve efficiency. will require new technologies. will irreversibly change the vehicle architecture.