Massive Driverless Car Survey Updates the Trolley Problem With a 'Moral Machine'
Trolley problem memes - Should our self-driving cars follow a utilitarian aproach? Note that in general you'd have roughly a 85% chance here of being on the road, not in the car.
People want self-driving cars to value passenger safety over pedestrians, study says | PBS NewsHour
Self-Driving Car Accident Lawyer
The Trolley Problem, Reimagined: Self-Driving Cars - Areo
Should a self-driving car kill the baby or the grandma? Depends on where you're from. | MIT Technology Review
Driverless cars: Who should die in a crash? - BBC News
Autonomous Driving Ethics: from Trolley Problem to Ethics of Risk | Philosophy & Technology
8: The "Trolley Problem for self-driving cars" [94] | Download Scientific Diagram
Should Your Driverless Car Hit a Pedestrian to Save Your Life? - The New York Times
Should a driverless car kill the kid or the retiree? – POLITICO
Who will you decide to kill with your self-driving car? Let's find out! - The Verge
Philosopher Scholar - Two Solutions to the Trolley Problem for Self Driving Cars
MIT maps global responses to 'who would you save?' survey on self-driving cars
Patrick Lin: The ethical dilemma of self-driving cars | TED Talk
The social dilemma of autonomous vehicles | Science
MIT Is Crowdsourcing Moral Decision Making For Self-Driving Cars - YouTube
How should autonomous vehicles be programmed? | MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Self-Driving Cars & Ethics: The Trolley Problem
Self driving cars and the law - more problems than answers
The ethical dilemma of self-driving cars - Patrick Lin - YouTube
The Moral Machine experiment | Nature
PDF] The Trolley, the Bull Bar, and Why Engineers Should Care About the Ethics of Autonomous Cars | Semantic Scholar
Moral Machine from MIT poses self-driving car thought experiments.
The ethics of self-driving cars – what would you do? | World Economic Forum
Whom should self-driving cars protect in an accident?
Self-Driving Cars & Ethics: The Trolley Problem
Frontiers | Humans, machines, and double standards? The moral evaluation of the actions of autonomous vehicles, anthropomorphized autonomous vehicles, and human drivers in road-accident dilemmas