Man vs machine: can a race car powered by AI beat a professional driver?

Would you watch Formula One if the cars were driven by computers instead of humans? That is the fundamental question asked by the Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League.

Also known as A2RL, the league comes from Aspire, a technology research and innovation hub that Abu Dhabi hopes will become the next Silicon Valley. With autonomous racing, Aspire also hopes to create not only a spectacle that replaces racing drivers with computer developers, but which could accelerate the development of roadgoing autonomous vehicles and their safety systems.

It’s easy to dismiss a form of motorsport that lacks even a hint of human jeopardy, or bravery. But AI racing is a proposition worth unpacking, since a skill mastered by humans still sits at the heart of what A2RL wants to achieve. “The competition will be in the brains of the engineers who programme the AI and the cars,” says Stephane Timpano, chief executive of Aspire.

A2RL autonomous race car

The AI-driven car (right) on the grid at Suzuka with a human-driven car (left)

(Image credit: Future)

The league is made up of 12 teams from nine countries, including France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the USA, but not the UK, at least for now. Rather than compromising familiar names from the world of human-driven motorsport, A2RL teams mostly come from leading educational and technology institutions. The league says its ambition is to “attract some of the world’s brightest minds through the thrill of competition and a technological frontier, helping to develop autonomous technology for the wider mobility industry.”

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