| > With single modality sensors, you have no way of truly detecting failures in that modality, other than hacks like time-series normalizing (aka expected scenarios). "A man with a watch always knows what time it is. If he gains another, he is never sure" Most safety critical systems actually need at least three redundant sensors. Two is kinda useless: if they disagree, which is right? EDIT: > If multiple sensor modalities disagree, even without sensor fusion, you can at least assume something might be awry and drop into a maximum safety operation mode. This is not always possible. You're on a two lane road. Your vision system tells you there's a pedestrian in your lane. Your LIDAR says the pedestrian is actually in the other lane. There's enough time for a lane change, but not to stop. What do you do? |
They don't work by merely taking a straw poll. They effectively build the joint probability distribution, which improves accuracy with any number of sensors, including two.
> You're on a two lane road. Your vision system tells you there's a pedestrian in your lane. Your LIDAR says the pedestrian is actually in the other lane. There's enough time for a lane change, but not to stop.
Any realistic system would see them long before your eyes do. If you are so worried, override the AI in the moment.