Building Acceptance and Trust in Autonomous Mobility
Acronym
Trustonomy
Description of the granted funding
Despite technological breakthroughs in connected and automated transport, the total transformation of existing transportation into a fully autonomous system is still decades away. In the meantime, mixed traffic environments with semi-autonomous vehicles proactively passing the dynamic driving task back to the human driver, whenever system limits are approached, is expected to become the norm. Such a Request to Intervene (RtI) can only be successful and met with trust by end-users if the driver state is continuously monitored and his/her availability properly evaluated and sufficiently triggered (through tailored human-machine interfaces - HMIs). In parallel, driver training has to evolve to account for the safe and sensible usage of semi-automated driving, whereas driver intervention performance has to be made an integral part of both driver and technology assessment. Besides, the ethical implications of automated decision-making need to be properly assessed, giving rise to novel risk and liability analysis models.
The vision of Trustonomy (a neologism from the combination of trust + autonomy) is to maximise the safety, trust and acceptance of automated vehicles by helping to address the aforementioned technical and non-technical challenges through a well-integrated and inter-disciplinary approach, bringing domain experts and ordinary citizens to work closely together. Trustonomy will investigate, setup, test and comparatively assess, in terms of performance, ethics, acceptability and trust, different relevant technologies and approaches, including driver state monitoring systems, HMI designs, risk models, and driver training methods. This will be done through both simulator and field based studies, in a variety of autonomous driving and RtI scenarios, covering different types of users (in terms of age, gender, driving experience, etc.), road transport modes (private cars, trucks, buses), levels of automation (L3 - L5) and driving conditions.
Show moreStarting year
2019
End year
2022
Granted funding
TYOTEHOSEURA RY
160 435 €
Participant
UNIVERSITE GUSTAVE EIFFEL (FR)
309 850 €
Participant
ITALSCANIA SPA (IT)
145 125 €
Participant
AUTOKLUB POZNANSKI OCTAVIUS (PL)
143 125 €
Participant
CATALINK LIMITED (CY)
297 500 €
Participant
ROBOCAR TECHNOLOGIES SPOLKA Z OGRANICZONA ODPOWIEDZIALNOSCIA (PL)
201 940 €
Participant
TERNIENERGIA SPA (IT)
519 510 €
Coordinator
VODAFONE INNOVUS ANONIMI ETAIREIA SYSTIMATON EPIKOININIAS AYTOMATISMONKAI EFARMAGIS PLIROFORIKIS (EL)
129 375 €
Participant
SOLARIS BUS & COACH SPOLKA AKCYJNA (PL)
213 435 €
Participant
TTS Italia (IT)
126 340 €
Participant
INSTYTUT TRANSPORTU SAMOCHODOWEGO (PL)
356 250 €
Participant
INTRASOFT INTERNATIONAL SA (LU)
307 500 €
Participant
AITEK SPA (IT)
233 690 €
Participant
PANEPISTIMIO PATRON (EL)
231 875 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS (UK)
337 550 €
Participant
AGENCIA ESTATAL CONSEJO SUPERIOR DEINVESTIGACIONES CIENTIFICAS (ES)
206 500 €
Participant
Amount granted
3 920 000 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
Research and Innovation action
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
SOCIETAL CHALLENGES - Smart, Green And Integrated Transport (5374Topic
Driver behaviour and acceptance of connected, cooperative and automated transport (MG-3-3-2018Call ID
H2020-MG-2018-TwoStages Other information
Funding decision number
815003
Identified topics
transportation, mobility, logistics