Large-scale piloting in open road conditions is necessary to better understand requirements for enhancing automated driving (AD). The data from road tests help to pinpoint the areas that require further development before automated vehicles enter product refinement and deployment. Above all, knowledge on user experience and requirements for marketable vehicles are needed.
The most essential expected impact of AD for the society is safety. Globally traffic accidents kill over 1 million persons annually, much more than all ongoing wars counted together. A positive effect in the reduction of accidents was expected for most of the analysed scenarios in L3Pilot.
The objective of the project was to test and study the viability of automated driving as a safe and efficient means of transportation. To achieve this overall goal, several technical objectives had to be defined and met before first empirical, data-led guesses of automated driving potential in changing transportation and mobility can be presented.
The work did not focus on road tests alone for collecting vehicle data and users’ impressions, analysing, and reporting the results. Large-scale piloting could not tackle all open questions on possible impacts and driver-vehicle interaction due to safety issues. To partly overcome these issues, detailed supplementary experiments addressed these matters.
Furthermore, the aim of the project was not only to pilot automated driving, but also to study user reactions, preferences, and willingness to use automated vehicles. This information enabled planning business scenarios and the deployment of AD. Piloting and supplementary studies carried out paved the way for this aim. Furthermore, the exploitation of the project results was also one key goal of the project. Especially, Code of Practice created for public use was seen an important factor boosting the development of automated driving systems globally.