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Waymo Self-Driving Cars Can Now Obey Police Hand Signals

In the event that a traffic light is not working, Waymo's self-driving cars will now be able to use AI to detect and respond to the arm movements of a traffic cop as they wave traffic through an intersection. You can watch a demo of it on YouTube. Futurism reports: Waymo first claimed that its autonomous vehicles could respond to hand signals from nearby cyclists back in 2016. That particular research treated cyclists, from the vehicle's perspective, as obstacles to track and avoid. A new video published by Waymo on Wednesday is the first that shows its vehicles responding to gesture commands -- especially in the absence of the traffic lights on which it would normally rely -- and obeying police orders. The video, which runs at three times normal speed, shows a picture-in-picture display of the car's digital perspective and a video camera as it goes through an intersection.

The video shows the car approach the intersection where a virtual red wall blocks off the road, suggesting that the computer's software responds to the absence of a green light at an intersection the same way as it might to an illuminated red light. The cop in the video, represented by a small prism, teeters across the virtual representation of the intersection before finally waving the Waymo vehicle's vehicle through the intersection and along its way.

2 of 119 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What if the car hits someone? by sunking2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The question is one of responsibility. A person who hits and is fault loses license, is fined, goes to jail, bares responsibility. A driverless car that does so what happens? Go after the person who did nothing wrong? Go after the company? Disallow the use of the entire system? In the end its a litigation issue

  2. Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    That means that I can control other people’s cars via simple hand signals.

    I can’t wait for that to become mainstream.