I was recently returning to Dallas-Fort Worth on a flight from Baltimore when the captain advised all passengers to return to their seats and buckle-in due to weather-related turbulence ahead. I paused in thought, considering the controls of the plane – would the pilot assume control from autopilot, or maintain course, and in which mode would I feel more assured in safe operations? Up until two years ago, prior to a visit with TuSimple Holdings, Inc. in Tucson, Arizona, I would not have given flight operations a second thought. But in that Tucson visit, a long background in fleet transportation and technology compelled me to take advantage of the opportunity to experience autonomous commercial driving first-hand during a test run; though we were in autonomous mode, an experienced driver remained behind the wheel, in the event of the need for human control. Fast forward to December 22, 2021, this same company made history by successfully conducting the first L4 “driver out” autonomous commercial truck operation, completing an 80-mile nighttime delivery from Tucson to Phoenix, without a driver behind the wheel. While autonomous operations are quickly advancing in trucking, most of us do not consciously realize that at minimum, we are all passive users and involuntary adapters to autonomous transportation.
You are already a consumer of autonomous operations, both passively and actively.
Whether you are a regular or recent commercial air passenger (passive) or drive a recent automobile with such features as lane assist, automatic breaking, and adaptive cruise control (active), we are each engaged daily in autonomous driving activities. Even without such features in your car, your actions, and their impact on vehicles around you with such autonomous features, are inseparable. While autonomy has long been present in commercial aviation, the advancement of autonomous ground transportation is naturally, and quickly, following. Multiple companies, working alone as well as with major transportation carriers and retailers, are actively involved in autonomous applications across all segments of delivery. Many automobile manufactures comprise a portion of these efforts, further providing the advantages of autonomy directly to consumers of their personal vehicles. The Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) defines six levels of autonomy from Level 0 (no automation) to Level 5 (full automation).