Prelims
ISBN: 978-1-78714-834-5, eISBN: 978-1-78714-833-8
Publication date: 18 April 2018
Citation
Herrmann, A., Brenner, W. and Stadler, R. (2018), "Prelims", Autonomous Driving, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xiv. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78714-833-820181046
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
Half Title Page
AUTONOMOUS DRIVING
How the Driverless Revolution Will Change the World
Title Page
AUTONOMOUS DRIVING
How the Driverless Revolution Will Change the World
BY
ANDREAS HERRMANN
WALTER BRENNER
RUPERT STADLER
United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India – Malaysia – China
Copyright Page
Emerald Publishing Limited
Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK
First edition 2018
Copyright © 2018 Emerald Publishing Limited
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A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN: 978-1-78714-834-5 (Print)
ISBN: 978-1-78714-833-8 (Online)
ISBN: 978-1-78743-268-0 (Epub)
Acknowledgements
This book could never have been written without the inspiring and instructive discussions we had with some special people. They are all outstanding experts who will have a major impact on the many facets of autonomous driving in the coming years. With their experience and knowledge, they are making significant contributions to putting self-driving vehicles on our roads. They aren’t just interested in the technology, but always emphasise the social and economic aspects as well. We thank all of them for taking the time to share their knowledge and convictions with us. Excerpts from those discussions are presented throughout the book.
Jan Becker, Dr. | Senior Director, Faraday Future, Los Angeles, California, USA |
Ofer Ben-Noon | Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer, Argus Cyber Security, Tel Aviv, Israel |
Jose Castillo | Design Critic in Urban Planning and Design, Harvard University, Graduate School of Design, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, and architect in Mexico City, Mexico |
Joseph Curtatone | Mayor of the City of Somerville, Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
Volkmar Denner, Dr. | Chairman of the Board of Management of Robert Bosch GmbH, Stuttgart, Germany |
Claus Doll, Dr. | Head of Mobility Research, Fraunhofer Institute for Systems and Innovation Research, Karlsruhe, Germany |
Joachim Drees | Chief Executive Officer of MAN SE and MAN Truck & Bus, Munich, Germany |
Nicholas Epley, Dr. | John Templeton Keller Professor of Behavioral Science, University of Chicago, Booth School of Business, Chicago, Illinois, USA |
Carol A. Flannagan, Dr. | Co-Director, Center for the Management of Information for Safe and Sustainable Transportation at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA |
Iain Forbes | Head of the United Kingdom Government’s Centre for Connected and Autonomous Vehicles in the Department for Transport, London, United Kingdom |
Emilio Frazzoli, Dr. | Founder and Chief Technical Officer, NuTonomy, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Professor of Dynamic Systems and Control, ETH Zürich, Switzerland |
Dieter Fröhlich | Data Protection Officer, Audi, Ingolstadt, Germany |
Oliver Gassmann, Dr. | Professor and Director, Institute of Technology Management, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland, former Chief Technical Officer at Schindler, Lucerne, Switzerland |
Peter Gladbach, Dr. | Attorney-at-Law (Germany), Head of Legal Advice on Digitization, Antitrust Law, Office Management, Audi, Ingolstadt, Germany |
Erik Glaser | Principal Product Designer, Volkswagen Group of America, San Francisco, California, USA |
Henrik Henriksson | Chief Executive Officer, Scania, Södertälje, Sweden |
Heinrich Hiesinger, Dr. | Chief Executive Officer, ThyssenKrupp, Düsseldorf, Germany |
Lutz Junge | Principal Engineer, Electronics Research Lab, Volkswagen Group of America, San Francisco, California, USA |
Kristin Kolodge | Executive Director, Driver Interaction and Human Machine Interface, J. D. Power, Westlake Village, California, USA |
Martin Kolmar, Dr. | Professor of Economics, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland |
Hartmut Kremling | Engineering Consultant for 5G, Internet of Things and autonomous and connected Driving, Dresden, Germany |
Brett Lantz | Associate Director of Analytics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA |
Patrick Little | Senior Vice President and General Manager, Automotive, Qualcomm Technologies Inc., San Diego, California, USA |
Jun Ma, Dr. | Professor and Director, School of Automotive Studies, Tongji University, Shanghai, China |
Andreas Meyer | Chief Executive Officer, Swiss Railway Corporation, Bern, Switzerland |
Julian Nida-Rümelin, Dr. | Professor of Philosophy, Ludwig-Maximilian University of Munich, former Federal Minister of Culture and Media, Berlin, Germany |
Jörg Ohlsen | Chief Executive Officer, Edag Engineering, Wiesbaden, Germany |
Philip Parsons | Chief Executive Officer, Parsons Consulting, Somerville, Boston, Massachusetts, USA |
Markwart von Pentz | President, Agriculture and Turf, Europe, Asia, Africa, John Deere & Company, Mannheim, Germany |
Jack Pokrzywa | Director, Society of American Engineers International (SAE), Troy, Michigan, USA |
Kristof Polmans | Head of Innovation and Technology, ThyssenKrupp Steering, Eschen, Liechtenstein |
Christian Purucker, Dr. | Centre for Traffic Sciences, University of Wuerzburg, Germany |
Andreas Reich | Head of Predevelopment Electronics, Audi, Ingolstadt, Germany |
Hartmut Rosa, Dr. | Professor of Sociology, University of Jena, Germany |
Domenico Savarese | Former Global Head of Telematics, Zurich Insurance Group, Switzerland, now Global Head of Products Strategy, Swiss Re, Zürich, Switzerland |
Amnon Shashua, Dr. | Co-founder, Chief Technical Officer and Chairman of Mobileye, Sachs Chair Professor in Computer Science, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel |
Houchan Shoeibi | President, Saint-Gobain Sekurit, Paris, France |
Florian, Stahl, Dr. | Professor of Quantitative Marketing and Consumer Analytics, University of Mannheim, Germany |
Othmar Wickenheiser, Dr. | Professor of Design, Munich University of Applied Sciences, Germany |
Isabelle Wildhaber, Dr. | Professor of Private and Business Law, Director, Institute for Labor Law and the World of Work, University of St. Gallen, Switzerland |
Matthias Wissmann | President of the German Association of the Automotive Industry (VDA), former Federal Minister of Research and Technology and Federal Minister of Transportation, Berlin, Germany |
Preface
Writing a book about autonomous driving is quite a challenge, because new findings on the subject – often contradictory – are appearing every day. Ideas, concepts and technologies relating to self-driving vehicles are emerging all over the world and it is hardly possible to gain a detailed overview of them all. So this book cannot aim to be an entirely consistent description that is accurate in every detail, but is more like the collected journals of an expedition that is not yet completed. It was worthwhile setting out on this expedition, because there is probably no other technology that will so fundamentally transform our economic and social lives. The time has come to address the subject of autonomous mobility and to make it the subject of social discourse, thus contributing to changing our lives for the better.
Examining this subject was also quite an experience for the authors, because it’s about software, sensors and algorithms only at first glance. The underlying narratives about new opportunities (and also risks) offered by autonomous driving are far more exciting. Rupert Stadler, as CEO of Audi, is faced with the challenge of guiding a globally leading automobile company into the digital age. This requires a gigantic transformation process, which will change the company’s culture and organisation as well as its products. Andreas Herrmann, Professor of Marketing, has experienced in the slums of São Paulo how mobility is a precondition for work and prosperity. If we succeed in using autonomous driving to move people faster and further, they can find better work, escape poverty and take control of their lives. Walter Brenner, Professor of Information Management, is fascinated by the speed and intensity of automotive digitisation. In collaboration with colleagues in start-ups in Silicon Valley and at Stanford University, he has found out that information technology will no longer be added to the car, but that the car will be built around the information technology.
Many employees, colleagues, experts and outstanding personalities in the fields of politics, business and society have collaborated on this book. We thank them all for contributing their knowledge and experience. The comments from our colleague Professor Hubert Österle and the wide-ranging research on pictures and texts by Nicola Schweitzer, Cynthia Sokoll, Barbara Rohner and Manuel Holler were particularly valuable. Finally, we appreciate the enthusiastic support of Pete Baker at Emerald and especially his patience, as we repeatedly had to tell him that it would take us a bit longer because new findings had become available.
We hope our work has resulted in a book that illuminates this very important subject from various perspectives and contributes towards an open, honest and broad-based discussion about the opportunities and risks of autonomous driving. We authors are euphoric and convinced of this technology’s potential. But we have doubts and concerns as well, which are also expressed in this book.
Andreas Herrmann
Walter Brenner
Rupert Stadler
- Prelims
- Part 1 Evolutions and Revolutions in Mobility
- Chapter 1 Autonomous Driving Is a Reality
- Chapter 2 Facts about Human Driving
- Chapter 3 Megatrends in Mobility
- Chapter 4 Disruptions in Mobility
- Part 2 Perspectives on Autonomous Driving
- Chapter 5 History
- Chapter 6 Levels
- Chapter 7 Visions
- Chapter 8 Economics
- Chapter 9 Roadmap
- Part 3 Technology of Autonomous Driving
- Chapter 10 Model
- Chapter 11 The Digitised Car
- Chapter 12 The Connected Car
- Chapter 13 Cyber Security and Data Privacy
- Part 4 Arena of Autonomous Driving
- Chapter 14 Fields
- Chapter 15 Stakeholders
- Chapter 16 Players
- Part 5 Customers and Their Mobility Behaviour
- Chapter 17 The Problem with Mobility
- Chapter 18 Mobility as Social Interaction
- Chapter 19 Customers’ Expectations
- Chapter 20 Use Cases for Autonomous Driving
- Chapter 21 Can Autonomous Driving Fail?
- Chapter 22 New Types, New Segments
- Part 6 Framework Conditions for Autonomous Driving
- Chapter 23 Protection and Liability
- Chapter 24 Norms and Standards
- Chapter 25 Ethics and Morals
- Part 7 Impact on Vehicles
- Chapter 26 The Vehicle as an Ecosystem
- Chapter 27 Vehicle Design
- Chapter 28 Human–Machine Interaction
- Chapter 29 Time, Cost and Safety
- Part 8 Impact on Companies
- Chapter 30 Business Models
- Chapter 31 Value Chains
- Chapter 32 The Sharing Economy
- Chapter 33 The Insurance Industry
- Part 9 Impact on Society
- Chapter 34 Work and Welfare
- Chapter 35 Competitiveness
- Chapter 36 Emerging Societies
- Chapter 37 Urban Development
- Part 10 What Needs to be Done?
- Chapter 38 Agenda for the Auto Industry
- Chapter 39 Ten-Point Plan for Governments
- Epilogue: Brave New World
- Bibliography
- Index