Mirak

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AI is teaching the Ford Mustang Mach-E how to drive

AI is teaching the Ford Mustang Mach-E how to drive
Semi-autonomous BlueCruise feature improved with artificial intelligence

The Ford Mustang Mach-E has been going to driving school.

The electric SUV is one of the models that is available with Ford’s BlueCruise semi-autonomous adaptive cruise control system.

The feature is similar to GM’s Super Cruise and allows drivers to take their hands off the wheel and feet off the pedals while the car controls its own speed and steers within a highway lane.

Facial monitoring technology makes sure that the drivers are keeping their eyes on the road and are ready to take back control in case of emergency.

Ford's BlueCruise will deactivate if they are not, and the car will bring itself to a controlled stop with the hazard lights on if a driver fails to respond.

At least that is all it could do when it launched a year ago.

The 2023 Mustang Mach-E comes with the latest BlueCruise 1.2 software, which has added functionality and works better overall.

Ford has been using artificial intelligence to improve the system’s capabilities through machine learning.

Along with its in-house testing, Ford collects data from owners who have opted in to share real world information from their vehicles, which includes video clips and radar records.

Ford has sold nearly 200,000 vehicles with BlueCruise to date, and customers have used it for more than 64 million miles combined, which has provided it with a huge amount of data to work with.

"A fairly large number of customers do decide that they want to share data with us," Sammy Omari, Ford’s executive director for advanced driver assist system technologies, told Fox News Digital.

"We are very surgical about what we’re allowed to collect and not just about how we collect it, but how we handle that data internally," he said.

AI software scrubs the data of personal information, blurs license plates in the images and crops them to just the parts it needs.

"We’re not really interested in anything, any data that could lead us to what customers used the car, like, for example, things like the vehicle identification number," Omari said.

The vehicles send reports to Ford over cellular or Wi-Fi connections whenever BlueCruise disengages, so that it can see what happened.

"Every time a customer has a disconnect out of hands-free to hands-on, we do collect that little bit of data, and we automatically analyze the data," Omari said.

"We want to know how our customers are using our product, where does the product sometimes fail. It’s not perfect."

However, it is getting there. Compared to when Fox News Digital tested the original version last year, BlueCruise can now stay engaged for much longer before asking for help.

"For time between disconnects we improved almost 2x, so it’s kind of dramatic," Omari said.

The algorithm learns in part by looking at video shot in different environmental and lighting conditions.

This gives it a broader understanding of what roads and lane markers look like across the 130,000 miles of controlled access highways in the U.S. and Canada that have been certified for it to operate on so far.

It also took a few notes from the drivers. The system realized that drivers would often take the wheel and move over a little bit within their lane when a large truck was next to them, so BlueCruise 1.2 has been programmed to do that automatically when it is operating.

"We saw that in our customer data over and over and over again," Omari said.

It is also now able to check for other vehicles and change lanes by itself when the driver hits the turn signal, and generally deals with traffic in a more natural way. Additional capabilities will be added down the road, but Ford hasn't revealed them just yet.

Of course, while AI does a lot of the heavy lifting developing the software, it is ultimately up to the humans on Omari's team to add the final touches and validate it. The cars cannot modify the software onboard by themselves.

"Machine learning engineers are a very rare commodity and a very expensive commodity," Omari explained.

"For them to operate at scale, at Ford scale, we really want them to focus on small bits and pieces where they can add value that we can’t automate."
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TheVirtualTim

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BTW, this may be a coincidence ... but it may be related to sensor locations. I now have a StealthHitch on the '23 (which as BC 1.2 with lane-change). When we had the bike rack on (with a bike on it) and tried to do an automatic lane change, it would say "preparing" but would never actually *perform* a lane change.

It made me suspect that the bike may interfere with the cars sensors as it tries to assess whether it is safe to move over.
 
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Mirak

Mirak

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I had no idea I was sharing video clips and radar records. Not that I really care, but interesting.

Nice to know they've doubled the time between disconnects, however they are measuring that.

Interesting that Ford is attributing BC1.2's lane adjustment to an AI suggestion? I mean lots of people here have been asking for that for quite a while.
 

Logal727

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Along with its in-house testing, Ford collects data from owners who have opted in to share real world information from their vehicles, which includes video clips and radar records.
Is this for people who are doing the Token collection or everyone who opts in to all the connectivity permissions?
 

Twaddle

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BTW, this may be a coincidence ... but it may be related to sensor locations. I now have a StealthHitch on the '23 (which as BC 1.2 with lane-change). When we had the bike rack on (with a bike on it) and tried to do an automatic lane change, it would say "preparing" but would never actually *perform* a lane change.

It made me suspect that the bike may interfere with the cars sensors as it tries to assess whether it is safe to move over.
Likely coincidence. I have nothing attached to my ‘23 and it refuses to change lanes in a timely manner about 5% of the time, usually when I’m rounding a curve on the freeway after passing someone.
 


Blue highway

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doubling time between disconnects is welcome. Looking forward to 1.2
 
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Mirak

Mirak

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Is this for people who are doing the Token collection or everyone who opts in to all the connectivity permissions?
No idea, but I kinda doubt it’s only tokens. That wouldnt be many people.
 

samev

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The system realized that drivers would often take the wheel and move over a little bit within their lane when a large truck was next to them, so BlueCruise 1.2 has been programmed to do that automatically when it is operating
Haha. This should read "the system realized that helpless drivers forced to drive along the right edge of their lane on the undercooked BC1.0 would often ..."
 
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Mirak

Mirak

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Haha. This should read "the system realized that helpless drivers forced to drive along the right edge of their lane on the undercooked BC1.0 would often ..."
I wonder if they could save a lot of time and money programming “the system” to just read macheforum.com, instead. We have a lot of good suggestions here - not just lane adjustment some have been asking for since BC1.0 began.

But this does give me a brilliant idea - let’s make signs of our top bug fixes and enhancements and hang them in front of our front-facing cams. Maybe @Jimrpa would finally get his frunk release and I could turn off my motion sensors.
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