A
The automotive sector is well used to adapting to automation in manufacturing. The implementation of robotic car manufacture from the 1970s onwards led to significant cost savings and improvements in the reliability and flexibility of vehicle mass production. A new challenge to vehicle production is now on the horizon and, again, it comes from automation. However, this time it is not to do with the manufacturing process, but with the vehicles themselves.
Research projects on vehicle automation are not new. Vehicles with limited self-driving capabilities have been around for more than 50 years, resulting in significant contributions towards driver assistance systems. But since Google announced in 2010 that it had been trialling self-driving cars on the streets of California, progress in this field has quickly gathered pace.
B
There are many reasons why technology is advancing so fast. One frequently cited motive is safety; indeed, research at the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory has demonstrated that more than 90 percent of road collisions involve human error as a contributory factor, and it is the primary cause in the vast majority. Automation may help to reduce the incidence of this.
Another aim is to free the time people spend driving for other purposes. If the vehicle can do some or all of the driving, it may be possible to be productive, to socialise or simply to relax while automation systems have responsibility for safe control of the vehicle. If the vehicle can do the driving, those who are challenged by existing mobility models – such as older or disabled travellers – may be able to enjoy significantly greater travel autonomy.
C
Beyond these direct benefits, we can consider the wider implications for transport and society, and how manufacturing processes might need to respond as a result. At present, the average car spends more than 90 percent of its life parked. Automation means that initiatives for car-sharing become much more viable, particularly in urban areas with significant travel demand. If a significant proportion of the population choose to use shared automated vehicles, mobility demand can be met by far fewer vehicles.
D
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology investigated automated mobility in Singapore, finding that fewer than 30 percent of the vehicles currently used would be required if fully automated car sharing could be implemented. If this is the case, it might mean that we need to manufacture far fewer vehicles to meet demand. However, the number of trips being taken would probably increase, partly because empty vehicles would have to be moved from one customer to the next.
Modelling work by the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute suggests automated vehicles might reduce vehicle ownership by 43 percent, but that vehicles’ average annual mileage double as a result. As a consequence, each vehicle would be used more intensively, and might need replacing sooner. This faster rate of turnover may mean that vehicle production will not necessarily decrease
E
Automation may prompt other changes in vehicle manufacture. If we move to a model where consumers are tending not to own a single vehicle but to purchase access to a range of vehicle through a mobility provider, drivers will have the freedom to select one that best suits their needs for a particular journey, rather than making a compromise across all their requirements.
Since, for most of the time, most of the seats in most cars are unoccupied, this may boost production of a smaller, more efficient range of vehicles that suit the needs of individuals. Specialised vehicles may then be available for exceptional journeys, such as going on a family camping trip or helping a son or daughter move to university.
F
There are a number of hurdles to overcome in delivering automated vehicles to our roads. These include the technical difficulties in ensuring that the vehicle works reliably in the infinite range of traffic, weather and road situations it might encounter; the regulatory challenges in understanding how liability and enforcement might change when drivers are no longer essential for vehicle operation; and the societal changes that may be required for communities to trust and accept automated vehicles as being a valuable part of the mobility landscape.
G
It’s clear that there are many challenges that need to be addressed but, through robust and targeted research, these can most probably be conquered within the next 10 years. Mobility will change in such potentially significant ways and in association with so many other technological developments, such as telepresence and virtual reality, that it is hard to make concrete predictions about the future. However, one thing is certain: change is coming, and the need to be flexible in response to this will be vital for those involved in manufacturing the vehicles that will deliver future mobility.
Nguồn: Cambridge IELTS 15
GIẢI THÍCH
| Đáp Án | Trích Dẫn | Giải Thích |
|---|---|---|
| 1. C | Đoạn C: “At present, the average car spends more than 90 percent of its life parked.” | Câu hỏi tìm thông tin về lượng thời gian một chiếc xe không được sử dụng. Đoạn C nêu rõ chiếc xe trung bình dành “hơn 90% thời gian đời sống của nó để đỗ” (parked). |
| 2. B | Đoạn B: “Another aim is to free the time people spend driving for other purposes. If the vehicle can do some or all of the driving, it may be possible to be productive, to socialise or simply to relax… those who are challenged by existing mobility models – such as older or disabled travellers – may be able to enjoy significantly greater travel autonomy.” | Đoạn B liệt kê một số “advantages” (lợi ích) trực tiếp của xe không người lái cho người dùng đường bộ: giải phóng thời gian, cho phép làm việc/giải trí, và giúp người già/khuyết tật đi lại tự do hơn. |
| 3. E | Đoạn E: “…drivers will have the freedom to select one that best suits their needs for a particular journey, rather than making a compromise across all their requirements.” | Đoạn E mô tả một cơ hội mà người dùng có thể “chọn phương tiện phù hợp nhất cho mỗi chuyến đi” (select one that best suits their needs for a particular journey). |
| 4. G | Đoạn G: “…these can most probably be conquered within the next 10 years.” | Đoạn G đưa ra một ước tính (“an estimate”) về thời gian cần thiết để giải quyết các vấn đề: “within the next 10 years” (trong vòng 10 năm tới). |
| 5. D | Đoạn D: “This faster rate of turnover may mean that vehicle production will not necessarily decrease.” | Đoạn D đưa ra một “suggestion” (gợi ý) rằng việc sử dụng xe tự động có thể không làm giảm số lượng xe được sản xuất (“vehicle production will not necessarily decrease”). |
| 6. human error | Đoạn B: “…research at the UK’s Transport Research Laboratory has demonstrated that more than 90 percent of road collisions involve human error as a contributory factor…” | Số liệu từ Phòng thí nghiệm Nghiên cứu Giao thông Vận tải chỉ ra rằng hầu hết các vụ tai nạn đều một phần do “human error” (lỗi của con người). |
| 7. car-sharing | Đoạn C: “Automation means that initiatives for car-sharing become much more viable…” | Tự động hóa khiến các sáng kiến “car-sharing” (chia sẻ xe hơi) trở nên khả thi hơn. |
| 8. ownership | Đoạn D: “Modelling work… suggests automated vehicles might reduce vehicle ownership by 43 percent…” | Nghiên cứu của Viện Nghiên cứu Giao thông Vận tải Đại học Michigan cho thấy có thể giảm 43% việc sở hữu (“ownership”) xe. |
| 9. mileage | Đoạn D: “…but that vehicles’ average annual mileage double as a result.” | Kết quả của việc trên là số dặm di chuyển trung bình hàng năm (“mileage”) của mỗi xe sẽ tăng gấp đôi. |
| 10. Travellers could spend journeys doing something other than driving. | Đoạn B: “If the vehicle can do some or all of the driving, it may be possible to be productive, to socialise or simply to relax while automation systems have responsibility for safe control of the vehicle.” | “Travellers could spend journeys doing something other than driving.” (Người di chuyển có thể dành thời gian trên hành trình để làm việc khác ngoài lái xe). Thông tin trong bài đồng ý: họ có thể làm việc, giao tiếp xã hội hoặc thư giãn. |
| 11. People who find driving physically difficult could travel independently. | Đoạn B: “…those who are challenged by existing mobility models – such as older or disabled travellers – may be able to enjoy significantly greater travel autonomy.” | “People who find driving physically difficult could travel independently.” (Những người gặp khó khăn về thể chất khi lái xe có thể đi lại độc lập). Thông tin trong bài đồng ý, chỉ ra người già và người khuyết tật sẽ có “tự do đi lại lớn hơn đáng kể” (greater travel autonomy). |
| 12. making sure the general public has confidence in automated vehicles | Đoạn F: “…the societal changes that may be required for communities to trust and accept automated vehicles as being a valuable part of the mobility landscape.” | “making sure the general public has confidence in automated vehicles” (đảm bảo công chúng có niềm tin vào xe tự động). Đoạn F nói về thách thức xã hội trong việc khiến cộng đồng “tin tưởng và chấp nhận” (trust and accept) xe tự động. |
| 13. getting automated vehicles to adapt to various different driving conditions | Đoạn F: “These include the technical difficulties in ensuring that the vehicle works reliably in the infinite range of traffic, weather and road situations it might encounter…” | “getting automated vehicles to adapt to various different driving conditions” (khiến xe tự động thích ứng với các điều kiện lái xe khác nhau). Đoạn F nói về khó khăn kỹ thuật trong việc đảm bảo xe hoạt động đáng tin cậy trong vô số tình huống giao thông, thời tiết và đường xá. |
