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Pilotless Emergency Services Helicopters Coming to Silicon Valley

19 points| rmason | 7 years ago |nytimes.com | reply

20 comments

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[+] kjeetgill|7 years ago|reply
> Silicon Valley Takes a (Careful) Step Toward Autonomous Flying

> A new flying ambulance service will use small helicopters outfitted with tech that could eventually let them fly without pilots.

The actual title and subtitle. They have pilots right now.

[+] oliveshell|7 years ago|reply
I love this sort of thing in theory, but I would never trust my life to an electronic helicopter pilot.

I believe the tech can be made to be safe and reliable during normal flight. However, all the edge cases here are potentially fatal.

How well can we train a computer to choose a safe emergency landing spot and auto-rotate down if the engine fails? How will it cope with avionics/electrical failures? Or a geomagnetic storm?

How well will the system be hardened against malicious attacks? How well can we endow it with the judgment to avoid icing at low temperatures?

The answer to most of these questions might well be “pretty darn well, actually;” however, emergencies happen, and in those situations, I— and, I suspect, many others— will only ever feel safe with an experienced, context-aware, human pilot at the controls.

(Unless we somehow crack general AI...)

[+] tlb|7 years ago|reply
Would a sufficiently good track record convince you? Say, a million flights with 80% lower accident rates than human pilots?

A strict utilitarian should only care about accident rates. But as Greene [0] and others show, most people don't make moral judgements in a strictly utilitarian way. Thus, we judge homicide as worse than choosing not to save someone from death, even though in both cases someone dies as a result of a decision.

One of the lessons from probing moral calculus is that nobody can really articulate reasons for their actual moral decisions. People can articulate utilitarianism, but not what people actually do.

But, if you can articulate why you might prefer a human pilot over an autopilot, even given sufficient statistics that the autopilot is safer, it'd be interesting to hear.

[0] http://www.joshua-greene.net/

[+] allthenews|7 years ago|reply
Well, probably by training the net under such conditions. Actually I see no reason that, with a sufficiently large and accurate dataset, a neural net can't be trained to pick out a "safe[enough]" emergency landing spot. And, a well trained net should be able to fly in any condition, including limited avionics, better than a human.

You might ask where this data will be coming from. I suspect 3D physics simulations are accurate enough that they could be used to generate data. Particularly if optimized for the physics behind helicopter handling.

[+] rmason|7 years ago|reply
Right now if you take an ordinary ambulance and let it enter one of Elon Musk's Boring Company tunnels and speed towards the hospital at 150 mph with no time outs for traffic that would be a large enough advance for most people with way less risk. Sometimes one new "good enough" technology overtakes a sexier one.
[+] Bucephalus355|7 years ago|reply
The military has said this is going to be a big thing.

I can’t remember which general it was, but during testimony in front the Armed Service Commission in Congress either this year or late 2017, he made the remark that around 60% of casualties in both Iraq and Afghanistan were essentially “logistics casualties” where people were injured or killed transporting something.

This technology will obviously reduce those kinds of casualties significantly.

On the other hand, warfare used to be limited by the size of somewhat small armies. Then came mass conscription, where the whole nation was drafted. Then came “total war” where 16-65 year old men and women were fighting, but even then not everyone could fight due to someone having to support the frontline troops.

Perhaps this all ushers in another step of a more bloody, more people fighting each other, stage of war where everyone can be on on the “front lines”. The advent of cyber conflict, which extends the lines of warfare beyond what even strategic bombing could do, suggests this.

EDIT: Also worth noting that in air war, the bottleneck has usually not been plane production so much as it’s replacing the pilots. Air campaigns were limited by the amount of skilled pilots you were willing to lose. This also might turn that logic upside down as well.

[+] pkaye|7 years ago|reply
Its amazing that we can automate helicopters but can't do the same for BART.
[+] jakelarkin|7 years ago|reply
an autonomous helicopter startup doesn't have unions with collective bargaining agreements (contractually obligating them to have at least 1 human operator).
[+] dmckeon|7 years ago|reply
Autonomous helicopter (AH) - likely, in time.

Law enforcement & traffic reporting with AH, a natural early application.

AH taxi services, sure eventually.

AH for LEO or EMS response to accident scenes or other helo-accessible locations, sure.

But AH to transport emergent patients to definitive care sounds like a marketing, regulatory, and training nightmare. Fifty sets of state laws, thousands of hospital/EMS medical directors to work with, and tens of thousands of local EMS workers to train seems like a long hill to climb. Granted, we have had decades of helicopter usage in EMS, so a path is known.

My guesses are that the “air ambulance” image is being used to attract eyeballs and investors, that early use cases will be for law enforcement, with a pivot to expensive taxi/commuting usage.

[+] dchichkov|7 years ago|reply
I would suggest building a tiny little system that is actually safety certified as per DAL DO-178B and can run on an aviation grade platform.

This suggestion applies to all "autonomous vehicle" startups. Build a small component that follows safety standards and is portable to major safety-certified platforms - this will be useful.

[+] Animats|7 years ago|reply
Gradually the gap between big drones and small helicopters closes.
[+] ReGenGen|7 years ago|reply
Is the BIG expense w/ heli services the pilot... -or- is it the helicopter + maintenance + fuel + support organization?

This seems to be solving the wrong problem...