The Eureka PROMETHEUS Project (PROgraMme for a European Traffic of Highest Efficiency and Unprecedented Safety, 1987–1995) was the largest R&D project ever in the field of driverless cars. It received €749,000,000 in funding from the EUREKA member states,[1] and defined the state of the art of autonomous vehicles. Numerous universities and car manufacturers participated in this Pan-European project.[2]
In formulating the project, the automotive and industrial partners recognised the need for a wide range of skills and cooperated with over forty research establishments to create a programme consisting of seven sub-projects. Under a steering committee were three projects on industrial research and four on basic research.[3]
Industrial research
- PRO-CAR : Driver assistance by computer systems
- PRO-NET : Vehicle-to-vehicle communication
- PRO-ROAD : Vehicle-to-environment communication
Basic Research
- PRO-ART : Methods and systems of artificial intelligence
- PRO-CHIP: Custom hardware for intelligent processing in vehicles
- PRO-COM : Methods and standards for communication
- PRO-GEN : Traffic scenario for new assessment and introduction of new systems
In 1987, some UK Universities expressed concern that the industrial focus on the project neglected import traffic safety issues such as pedestrian protection. PRO-GEN project leader, the UK Government's Transport and Road Research Laboratory noted that research activities should 'in some way, further the aims of the vehicle companies.[4]
Results
editThe project culminated in a 'Board Members Meeting' (BMM) on 18–20 October 1994 in Paris.[5] Projects demonstrated ('Common European Demonstrators') were:
CED 1 : Vision Enhancement
CED 2-1 : Friction Monitoring and Vehicle Dynamics
CED 2-2 : Lane Keeping Support
CED 2-3 : Visibility Range Monitoring
CED 2-4 : Driver Status Monitoring
CED 3 : Collision Avoidance
CED 4 : Cooperative Driving
CED 5 : Autonomous Intelligent Cruise Control
CED 6 : Automatic Emergency Call
CED 7 : Fleet Management
CED 9 : Dual Mode Route Guidance
CED 10: Travel and Traffic Information Systems
PROMETHEUS PRO-ART profited from the participation of Ernst Dickmanns, the 1980s pioneer of driverless cars, and his team at Bundeswehr Universität München, collaborating with Daimler-Benz.[6] A first culmination point was achieved in 1994, when their twin robot vehicles VaMP and VITA-2 drove more than 1,000 kilometres (620 mi) on a Paris multi-lane highway in standard heavy traffic at speeds up to 130 kilometres per hour (81 mph). They demonstrated autonomous driving in free lanes, convoy driving, automatic tracking of other vehicles, and lane changes left and right with autonomous passing of other cars.[7]
Participants
editThere were upwards of 600 commercial members that participated in some way in the Prometheus Project,[2] however, notable ones include
BMW
- Bosch
- British Aerospace
- Bull
- CASA
- CGE
- Fiat
- GEC
- Imperial Chemicals, Inc.
- ICL
- Italtel
- Matra
- MBB
- Mercedes
- Montedison
- Nokia
- Olivetti
- Peugeot
- Philips
- Plessey
- Renault
- Saab
- SGS-Thompson
- Siemens
- Thomson
- Volkswagen
- Volvo
In addition to commercial participation, there were multiple countries that assisted with the project. These include
See also
edit- Driverless car
- DARPA Grand Challenge
- ARGO Project on autonomous cars
- ELROB trials
- Grand Cooperative Driving Challenge 2011, International Competition
Notes
edit- ^ "EUREKA Project E!45 PROMETHEUS". EUREKA website. Archived from the original on 2018-08-14. Retrieved 2015-10-31.
- ^ a b "High-Tech Europe". publishing.cdlib.org. Retrieved 2024-02-16.
- ^ Resources for tomorrow's transport. Brussels: European Conference of Transport Ministers (ECMT). 31 October 1989. pp. 455–458. ISBN 92-821-1142-3. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
- ^ Information, Reed Business (29 October 1987). "New Scientist" (1584): 30. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
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(help) - ^ Board Member Meeting Event Guide. PROMETHEUS. 1994.
- ^ Delcker, Janosch (19 July 2018). "The man who invented the self-driving car (in 1986)". Politico. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
- ^ J. Becker, "Autonomous Driving: The Impact of Automated Vehicles on Society," Springer International Publishing, 2016, pp. 32-33.