Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
The Courts Government Software News

Washington Finds Computer Simulation Unreliable 277

Toadpipe writes "Washington State Court of Appeals reverses a conviction in which a computer simulation had been the main evidence. Quoting 'At issue was PC-Crash, a computer program distributed by Vancouver, B.C.-based MacInnis Engineering Associates. The program recreates traffic collisions using simulations and reconstructions. "PC-Crash had not been validated for the purpose for which the evidence was offered, simulation and prediction of multiple-occupant movement within a vehicle during a multiple-collision accident," the Court of Appeals said in ordering a new trial. "There is no general acceptance in the relevant scientific community of the use of the PC-Crash program for the purposes to which it was put."' Here is the Court's opinion."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Washington Finds Computer Simulation Unreliable

Comments Filter:
  • What next? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:51PM (#11695688)
    Are they going to stop accepting my Grand Theft Auto murder re-enactments?
  • Darn it (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:53PM (#11695703)
    So I can't get a pilot license just for playing with Flight Simulator?
    • Actually I beleive they use Flight Simulator or a similar product for training students before they get into the plane. That way they can spend less money on running a small plane just for teaching about controls. The plane can then be dedicated to final teaching of the controls and the act of real-world flying.
  • PC Crash? (Score:5, Funny)

    by NJVil ( 154697 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:53PM (#11695705)
    Was this a MicroSoft product by any chance?
  • by jsrlepage ( 696948 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:53PM (#11695707) Homepage
    In other news, the Oval office informs all good citizens of United States that Kyoto computer simulations are no longer valid.
    • Re:In other news (Score:5, Informative)

      by ravenspear ( 756059 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:57PM (#11695741)
      The Senate already informed us of that long ago.
    • by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:58PM (#11695746) Journal
      Remember children, global warming all made up by evil pinko-commie liberals! Even though the ocean is rising, temperature is increasing, ice thickness is decreasing and computer simulations point to it, thats just plain no good enough! Unless of course it is the bible, so we should just trust that because someone wrote it 2,000 years ago.
      • Re:In other news (Score:3, Insightful)

        by defile ( 1059 )

        Correlation is not causation.

        Example: I started losing weight around the same time as I started exercising. Because I started exercising, I lost weight.

        The logical fallacy is that two events are linked when there's nothing to link them other than their concurrency. There are other possible explanations, such as dieting, intestinal parasites, or other diseases. Regardless, I don't need to suggest alternate explanations to show the fallacy, simply the fact that there's no illustration of cause throug

        • Re:In other news (Score:3, Insightful)

          by grmoc ( 57943 )

          When you assume that you cannot determine causality, the best you can do is to create a theory that stands up to testing.

          In fact, you cannot say that your dieting is the cause of your weight loss. It may have been coincidence. The best you can say is that it is 100% correlated with a large sample set (and thus high confidence).

          Example:

          Observation: I started exercising
          Observation: I started to lose weight.
          These observations are 100% correlated.

          Hypothesis: Exercising causes weight loss.

          Testing: Exercise,
    • Re:In other news (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I'd rather take the money and research ways to reduce our emissions rather than take the money to pay for our emissions and have to pay MORE to reduce them.. But that's just me. This is one of the few things I agree with our current "administration" on.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:54PM (#11695710)
    uncertified.

    Anyone can say that they're an expert. The court system requires that if you're going to present evidence, you better have some credentials. This program, apparently, did not have the proper credentials.
    • uncertified.

      and is therefore unreliable. i.e. You can't rely on it in a court of law. If you RTFA

      attaching an assessment of Heusser's PC-CRASH simulation from Boyd Allin of MacInnis Engineering Associates, Inc., which is the distributor of PC-CRASH for North America. Similar to McHenry, Allin opined that Heusser's arbitrary 'inputs' made the results of the occupant modeling highly suspect. Allin also stated that the PC-CRASH program could not calculate the speed change of a vehicle when it strikes a p
  • Duh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:55PM (#11695719) Journal
    Vehicle crashes are way more complex than anything we could currently think of.

    Every part on a car would need to be tested for strength, width, height, depth, shape, mass, the connections holding it to another part, and that bolt tested...You get the idea. You would also need the conditions that happened the second the crash occured. Road type, amount of friction, temperature, slope, etc. As a juror I would never trust a computer simulation.

    • Re:Duh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Evil Adrian ( 253301 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:59PM (#11695752) Homepage
      Hello... how do you think cars, airplanes, etc. are engineered? They simulate this kind of data all the time...
      • Re:Duh (Score:4, Insightful)

        by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:04PM (#11695783) Journal
        Yes, in a controlled enviroment with all variables accounted for and the actual blueprint of object.
      • IIRC, automakers tend to use supercomputers to simulate some things. You'd need the data from the automaker for every car involved. Some might be in custom file formats, and not all will be easily convertible into a single common format for a simulator.

        Then there's still the issue of knowing exactly where the ice patch is, or where the wet spot is, simulating the tires to the exact wear level. How much sand or salt was on the road, was it even or not?

        In the autos, it requires knowing the angle of the s
      • Re:Duh (Score:5, Insightful)

        by foog ( 6321 ) <phygelus@yahoo.com> on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @11:18PM (#11696265)
        How do you think cars and airplanes were engineered before we had crummy, inaccurate computer simulations?

        In the real world, when being right is more important than having a merely plausible prediction in vibrant colors, people do experiments and laboratory tests.

        Simulations by experienced analysts often turn out wrong: data from crash tests is much more trustworthy than the best simulations, let alone simulations performed by cops or prosecutors with some two-bit PC software.
      • Re:Duh (Score:5, Interesting)

        by EvilTwinSkippy ( 112490 ) <{yoda} {at} {etoyoc.com}> on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @11:36PM (#11696390) Homepage Journal
        You don't understand simulations.

        When Ford, or Daimler Benz goes out to design a car, they know where every bolt, nut, rivet, weld, and cup holder are. That information is fed into a finite element analysis model that breaks the car down into ever finer blocks of deformable material.

        They than take that model and bash it against a series of controlled obstructions.

        Even then, those simulations are just used to rule out certain design changes. All final designes are bolted to a hydrolic ram, filled with test dummies, and shot into a wall or another vehicle.

        And again.

        And again.

        Yes, the automaker DOES have a model of the car. Yes, that model could be fed into another FEA. But in order to produce any meaningful result you would have to have equally good data about all the occupants in the car. Where everything on the road was, and at which time in the "event."

        And did I mention that the simulation is only as good as the least accurate measurement? At best. And most of the data you would have needed is gone as soon as rescue crews arrive and attempt to move the vehicles out of the way of traffic?

    • You would also need the temperature of the car parts acounting for wind cooling (based on the speed the car was traveling, which is impossible to know).

      This is because, as we all know, metal weakens as it is heated. This is important because how a centain important part broke (bar reinforcing a sliding door, for instance) can make a big difference in how the other car bouces/hits/goes over the initial car.

      • generally speaking, all of this (temperature, materials, pressure, etc) can, and does, get calculated with *real* finite-element analysis of vehicle crash simulations.

        PC-Crash is not one of those pieces of software, however.
        • Thought so, seems like more of a novelty than something that gives trustable results.\

          I'm sure companies have the money and processing power for a COMPLETE crash testing of a car/plane but some prosecutor in Pu-Dunk Kansas will not. Good observation smitty45.

          • Re:Duh (Score:3, Informative)

            by smitty45 ( 657682 )
            yeah, the work done by LSTC's Dyna-3d, Altair's HyperMesh, and MSC'S Patran can give basically everything that you could *ever* want to know about explicit dynamic phenomena.

            I did about 4 years working for the Vehicle Crashworthiness Division for the US DOT using the above programs, and they are quite complex and used for mostly research, not accident reconstruction.
        • Re:Duh (Score:5, Informative)

          by hattig ( 47930 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:35PM (#11696001) Journal
          I read the court transcript because it was quite interesting.

          Turned out the simulation that was generated that kinda matched what happened had the data entered at random until it matched "Heusser manipulated data by entering arbitrary 'inputs' such as separation speeds as high as 1,114.8 mph, placing the mailbox pole away from where it was actually located, and having the computer occupant models remain in a default resting position after the collision with the mailbox".

          Indeed, the software was described at the end of the trial as "During closing argument to the jury, the prosecutor described PC-CRASH as a
          computer program that essentially takes the laws of physics and reduces them to mathematical calculations that can be done over and over again to generate an accurate picture of what happened during a collision based on the tire marks at the scene, based on the physical evidence in the case such as the damage to the car, as well as the conditions that can be observed at the scene.

          13 Report of Proceedings at 13. The prosecutor then showed the PC-CRASH
          video to the jury, again.
          Sipin was convicted as charged."


          Whilst the expert opinion from someone who used his brain to see what happened described something completely different. The jury was mislead to how good the software was quite clearly, they were lead to believe that the software was infallible. It is only as good as the person entering the data, and when they choose to ignore data because it is inconvenient ... well, you get the point.

          So whilst the guy was stupid for buying a manual car when he had gout and couldn't drive it half the time, he does deserve a retrial.
      • metal weakens when it gets about 600 celcius. Other posters have noted that finite element analysis is done that takes this into account, but for a car crash i think that there are bigger concerns than finding the temperature of the metal (until the car bursts into flames, or engine manifold gases are exhausting onto structural componenets) is not critical
    • Depends on what you're simulating. If you know that vehicle A was heading westbound and vehicle B was heading northbound, and that A and B collided in the intersection and ended up at positions X and Y, you could use physics to get a broad idea of what happened in the crash. Police do this all the time to reconstruct the scene by measuring length of skid marks, the ending positions, etc. and then work out the respective velocities of each car.

      And you're correct that jurors should never trust a computer s
      • Re:Duh (Score:4, Insightful)

        by mboverload ( 657893 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:10PM (#11695830) Journal
        You are right, they can semi-trust it to give an idea of what happened (Car A hits Car B directly on side, moves Car A 10-30 feet). This is not good enough for a court case. Take the "lie detector" for example. Even if it was way more accurate than it is currently courts would still not allow it into evidence.
        • Lie detector tests are interogation techniques, they can detect people lying sometimes, but they also have a *25%* false accusal rate. Which is why they are not allowed in court. They *ARE* good for getting people to confess, except a good criminal knows how to beat them anyways. If you'd like to know more, antipolygraph.org has a free 100 some odd page book that goes into all the details.
    • Re:Duh (Score:4, Insightful)

      by LetterRip ( 30937 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:16PM (#11695876)
      [QUOTE]Every part on a car would need to be tested for strength, width, height, depth, shape, mass, the connections holding it to another part, and that bolt tested...You get the idea. You would also need the conditions that happened the second the crash occured. Road type, amount of friction, temperature, slope, etc. As a juror I would never trust a computer simulation.[/QUOTE]

      This is like claiming that we can't calculate the acceleartion on an apple due to gravity, because the actual effect of gravity is dependent on the gravitational force of every atom, etc.

      Perfect knowledge is not necessary to acquire a reasonably accuarate simulation or estimation. And the error bars on simulation can easily be small enough that they are irrelevant to the conclusion.

      Now, we don't know the particular of this case, but nowhere near the information you seem to think is neccessary is actually relevent to a reasonably and usefully accurate simulation.

      LetterRip
      • Actually, the problem in question is rather less like the two-body apple problem and rather more like the N-body problem, which is extremely sensitive to initial conditions, and therefore rather tricky to work with even if you do know everything you need to.
    • Every part on a car would need to be tested for strength, width, height, depth, shape, mass, the connections holding it to another part, and that bolt tested

      hmmm....I think those parameters already exist. Like in the mfr's CAD/CAM system.

      Road type, amount of friction, temperature, slope, etc

      These are known quantities as well. The only real variable of those is temperature, and that can be found within a very few degrees.

      Now...should these simulations be used for specific, down to the millimeter recrea

    • True, but that doesn't rule out the eventual utility of simulations in understanding automobile accidents. After all, cars are already designed using simulations to understand their behaviour during crashes and other undesirable situations. The technology may not be ready for use as evidence (as the article indicates), but that doesn't mean it wont be ready someday.

      I hope this court decision doesn't have a dampening effect on automobile-accident-simulation research. It would be a shame to lose such a p

    • And from reading article I get the idea that the jurors did not have to just trust the simulation. The car door plastic melted onto the passenger's leg gave reasonably convincing evidence as to who was driving (which appears to be the root of the case).
    • Also they only break out the Simulations when the original crash is a little to complex to be obvious. Meaning it will always be less reliable.

      It reminds me of a news story I saw once. The reporter was standing in front of a car completely wrapped around a power pole in a suburban street.

      "Police think that speed may have been a factor"

  • by Claire-plus-plus ( 786407 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:55PM (#11695725) Journal
    My PC crashes quite reliably actually.
  • Non Newsworthy (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Space_Soldier ( 628825 ) <not4_u@hotmail.com> on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:56PM (#11695728)
    The program has not been validate for accuracy of what it simulates by the community at large. Therefore, it was dropped, and it cannot be accepted as evidence. I don't see this story as newsworthy.
  • Digital evidence (Score:4, Interesting)

    by TWX ( 665546 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @09:59PM (#11695751)
    I'd like them to stop accepting photo radar data. The cities in my area have switched to digital photography. Currently one's only out is to request the Plaintiff to produce the calibration records for the system for the day of the ticket and hope that they don't have that data.

    I'd be okay with photo radar and with red light cameras if they were used to bolster the Prosecution/Plaintiff, like if there were a car accident and the red light camera data were used to show that the cited person (by the officer on the scene) had indeed run the light, and that the officer was correct. The current system of using photography with near-automatic conviction deprives people of privacy. If the police want to cite people for speeding or for any other traffic violation then they need to get out there with people who will be required to testify as to what they saw; people who actively claim the count in the charge, not some computer or desk-jockey who analyses data after the fact.

    Of course, I also have the opinion that if there's no victim then there's no crime. Take this as you will.
    • So just because a cop wasn't there makes the crime legal?
      • by TWX ( 665546 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:22PM (#11695918)
        Who's the victim?

        Do you exceed the posted speed limit?

        What defines it as a crime when it hasn't yet been through due process?

        It's the job of the constabulary to enforce laws in person to protect the public, and to investigate real crime that has already occurred. Photo Radar for speed enforcement is a stupid idea, and just leads to people finding out where the cameras are that day, speeding everywhere except by the cameras. Traffic used to even require an officer to serve one with a court notice (the traffic citation), same as an officer picking up a wanted criminal to force a court appearance. Many cities don't even use the police departments to run photo radar, they contract it out to companies, who give the city a portion of the money collected. One such company is American Traffic Systems, who has operated in Scottsdale AZ and San Diego CA if memory serves.

        By not receiving instant citation, the accused has no opportunity to place any importance on the memories that might help them form a defense. The prosecution/plaintiff is rarely forced to appear in court either, let alone testify to remembering the vehicle as it sped by, or any of that, like a real officer is required to do. A real officer is required to take an oath that he or she isn't committing perjury when they testify. A picture sent to the court isn't, and should be thrown out if the prosecution/plaintiff does not appear to press their side.

        Photo Radar is treating people as guilty by default, without requiring individual explanation, or without an arraignment, pre-trial conference, and trial. It's a travesty to justice and a continual erosion of the rights of citizens by the government.
    • Please, shut the hell up. It actually seems like the system in your town is catching law-breakers quite well, and it seems like you have no respect for speed limits or red lights or whatever. You just want to get out of paying the fine. Why the hell should we adapt the system to make it easier to break the law without being punished for it?
    • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:18PM (#11695887)
      I have a more general problem with red-light radar (and most red-light radar) - it's "teaching to the test." Or in this case, "enforcing laws that are easily mechanized, not laws that are most critical to public safety."

      The biggest problem I face on the road are tailgaters and the guys who cut me off at interstate speeds and the morons who barrel out of parking lots at 20 mph without checking for traffic and the idiots who think "right turn on red" has right of way over people already on the road. Hell, even the superjock riding his bike far too fast for me to see him approaching as I cross the bike path... and he wrongly believes that he, not I, have right of way. (Pedestrians do, but in this state mounted bikes are "vehicles" and bike paths are "secondary roads.") As if it will matter when he hits my car (or vice versa), other than me suing his estate to repair my car's paint job.

      People who run red lights or are speeding between lights on limited access roads? Not A Problem. Maybe once every few years I'll nearly get clobbered by some moron who goes through an intersection at high speed long after the light changed, but that's reckless driving, not merely running a red light. The latter should remain illegal, but a low enforcement priority unless it's an ongoing serious problem at a specific location.

      So why do we see more and more red-light X systems? Because they're cheap revenue sources. To actually make driving safer you have to hire more cops and put them in more unmarked cars and get them out on the street where they can nail the guys who really are hazards to other drivers. Not guys going 45 in a 35 zone because that's what the heavy traffic is doing and it would be far more dangerous to obey the law than to break it. Or the guy who's behind a truck and doesn't know the light has turned red until he's already in the intersection.

      How long until the laws themselves are written on the basis of what's easily enforceable, not on the basis of what harms others?

      And the guy in Denver who put a photo-radar system on the interstate onramp where traffic is always at least 15 mph over the posted speed limit? The cop who lectured my HS class wants to talk to you - he assured tens of thousands of us that no cop would ever, under any circumstances, ticket us for going over the speed limit in order to merge with traffic. (We were supposed to gradually slow down once merged.) Ticket or being flattened by a semi? Hmm, which will it be? Ticket or being flattened by a semi. Gee, that's such a hard decision. Not.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Laws are useless unless enforced, and inconsistent enforcement is almost as bad as non-enforcement. You mentioned twice that you don't want to get punished for keeping up with traffic. Well, if people regularly got fined for speeding, then you wouldn't have that problem. I would bet that the speed limits could be raised if people actually followed them, because they probably take into account that the average person will drive X over the limit.

        Being in my 20's and not having any major diseases, driving to
      • "People who run red lights or are speeding between lights on limited access roads? Not A Problem. Maybe once every few years I'll nearly get clobbered by some moron who goes through an intersection at high speed long after the light changed, but that's reckless driving, not merely running a red light. The latter should remain illegal, but a low enforcement priority unless it's an ongoing serious problem at a specific location."

        Red light running is potentially lethal, moreso than tailgating in many situatio
      • I'll call bullshit (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Moraelin ( 679338 )
        The thing about cars is that they can kill or maim. _Far_ more people die or end up crippled in car accidents yearly than died in the 9/11 terrorist attack. More die or end up crippled in car accidents than in violent crimes.

        That's why those laws are there, and that's why those cameras are there. I'd hardly discount that as "enforcing laws that are easily mechanized, not laws that are most critical to public safety." It _is_ critical to public safety, and if it can be easily mechanized, I for one am all fo
    • It does not appear that just because you are captured on camera it is an automatic conviction. Look at the statistics for cities listed here [highwayrobbery.net].

      For example, look at San Francisco's 2004 statistics [highwayrobbery.net] and you'll see that out of 29,335 "raw" violations, only 7,943 citations were issued.

      -B
      • A failure to cite could be anything from "there was a police officer in the frame so the driver might have been directed to proceed through" to "we couldn't figure out who the driver was so we couldn't prosecute anyone".

        Come look at the situation here in Arizona and you'll find that they're very much inclined to press anyone involved with the car about who was driving, trying to get them to tip them off, and it's very hard to defend against it when the system itself is slanted so heavily in the plaintiff
    • The current system of using photography with near-automatic conviction deprives people of privacy.

      Don't you mean that it encourages people not to speed?

      Of course, I also have the opinion that if there's no victim then there's no crime.

      I would agree with that in most cases. This instance is an exception. When you violate traffic laws, you make it extremely easy for some random passerby to become a victim. The point of speeding laws is to deter people from speeding before somebody becomes a victim. I do
    • Of course, I also have the opinion that if there's no victim then there's no crime. Take this as you will.

      I'll take it as an excuse to tell a story. :)

      A couple of years back a guy ran over and killed a little girl very near my home. This young man was a speed enthusiast, drove a powerful BMW and had "Stockholm Getaway" (a video of crazy speeding through a city) in the glove box. When the accident happened he was speeding through a red light.

      Those are the facts. Now, to make this more interesting, let

  • You're kidding.... ....right?
  • Verify this (Score:4, Funny)

    by slimak ( 593319 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:02PM (#11695771)
    Can anyone else verify this story for me?
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Both people would be alive if they had been wearing seatbelts instead of being flung from the car when they crashed.
    • Not necessarily.

      Seatbelts will work for low-medium speed collissions but the there's the slight problem of F=MA.

      You might get away with whiplash... you might end up dead with a broken neck. You also might end up crushed when the seat rips from its moorings and slams into the dashboard.

      Seatbelts are a good thing but they're not a cure-all.
  • Yes, on a related technological point, I once noted here at Slashdot, that we as Americans tend to over engineer. In the process, we make everything complex. After the recent missile interceptor failures, I am now even more hungry for good news. Who knows whether simulations relied on in earlier days were never valid at all? Now there is this news too....where should I stop?
  • by tsstahl ( 812393 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:10PM (#11695827)
    I know, I may have to turn in my /. account.

    I would like to see more of this kind of common sense in life today.

    The story states both occupants were ejected from the car in the accident. The prosecution is quoted as saying their key element of the case was that part of the passenger door was melted on the dead guy.

    So which was it? Did the dead guy stay there and take the burn, or get ejected? Did the car sit for awhile burning, and take off again?

    I will make the specific conclusion from the vast amount of data in the article that there was enough doubt to go around in this case.

    /sarcasm off

    To often attorneys for both sides put up a George Lucas light show in order to sell their version to a jury. Matters are not helped by the fact that jury selection all to often resembles a Jerry Springer casting call.

    I've seen the software in question used in a trial (once). What I saw seemed to be a believable representation of an elastic collision between vehicles. At no time were there any renderings, or mention of what happened INSIDE the vehicles. But then again, you know what they say about prepared demos...
    • by Anonymous Coward
      I was on a jury not too long ago. Most of the other jurors I met seemed to be reasonable, normal people. Everyone I work with was telling me how to get out of jury duty, but I couldn't complain about how our justice system works if I'm not willing to do my part in it. (Oh, wait. This is Slashdot. Wrong audience for that statement.)

      What I found, though, is that a standard trial is a piss-poor way of getting to the truth. It may be "fair", and certainly it is a lot more expedient than a real investigation, b
      • What I found, though, is that a standard trial is a piss-poor way of getting to the truth.

        As well it should be! And I say this as a prosecutor. But the reason for this should be obvious: the truth is very often unknowable. Thus, given that it is impossible for the jury to figure out truth, you narrow the scope a little, and only ask them to resolve certain factual disputes, i.e., who is/isn't lying, whether a story is plausible, what a reasonable person would do, etc. The effect of this is that juries a

  • by HardCase ( 14757 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:15PM (#11695870)
    Even the summary belies the headline (and the article torpedoes it). The conviction was overturned because the software was not validated for the use for which it was used. The court made no comment on its reliability...they left that up to the scientific and engineering community. Based solely upon the court's comments and the article, it sounds like a good decision to me.

    =h=
  • by clem ( 5683 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:19PM (#11695894) Homepage
    How odd. My Judicial Appeal Simulator gave no indication that this ruling would occur.
  • by Centurix ( 249778 ) <centurixNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:22PM (#11695922) Homepage
    "As you can see from this computer simulation, the driver was in fact distracted by the 20 foot high Blue Screen of Death standing on the opposite corner of the intersection..."
  • The current system basically entails putting an expert on the stand and asking his/her opinion. I fail to see why this same system doesn't apply to the software. Of course it's not going to be perfect, but neither is an expert's testimony. So why can't this be considered something of an "expert" on crash simulation?
  • PC-Crash? (Score:2, Funny)

    by pyrrho ( 167252 )
    no problem, just reboot.
  • by Shishberg ( 819760 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:42PM (#11696040) Homepage
    In related news, the Slashdot community have dismissed the post's title - "Washington Finds Computer Simulation Unreliable" - as being inconsistent with the article, or indeed even the summary of the article directly beneath the title.

    At issue was the word "Unreliable", which implies some comment on the accuracy of the software in question. The article, however, consistently states that the software "had not been validated for the purpose for which the evidence was offered", a far more sensible claim.

    "Titles of Slashdot posts have not been validated for the purpose for which this one was offered, simulation and prediction of the content of the article itself," a Slashdot representative stated. "There is no general acceptance in the relevant online community of the use of article titles as a substitute for R-ing TFA."

    CowboyNeal was not available for comment.
  • So what? (Score:4, Informative)

    by Lulu of the Lotus-Ea ( 3441 ) <mertz@gnosis.cx> on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @10:54PM (#11696095) Homepage
    There seems to be much less to this story than the slashdot submission seems to insinuate.

    The court didn't find that software simulation was categorically disallowed as evidence. It didn't even find that the PC-CRASH application was inadmissible in general. It just found that this particular software in modeling this particular event had not been shown to satisfy expert consensus.

    Maybe PC-CRASH will in the future be shown reliable for this type of modeling. Maybe it will be shown to be inaccurate. Maybe the makers will enhance the software to demonstrably cover this type of event. None of these are anything terribly profound, and none have any great moral for the intersection of law and software.
  • as any college student can tell you. Ever wonder why physicists leave out friction and air resistance when making up the formulae? Because those are especially tricky.

    Any simulation represents a subset of reality - - the quality of the simulation depends on how large this subset is.

    When a car-crash simulator that accounts not only for the vectors, but also the exact conditions of the road, the exact nature of the cars, and friction (maybe air resistance!), I'll see it acceptable as the crux of an argume
  • by Trillan ( 597339 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @11:06PM (#11696179) Homepage Journal

    I remember ten years ago, gradebook software calculated grades incorrectly. It was used in thousands of schools.

    I was a high school student at the time, doing a little part-time work for a company writing a competitor. We actually discovered this after hand testing our calculations by hand. Our calculations were right. But what other tests could we do? We figured we'd try their numbers and see if we got the same results. We didn't. Surely it was our problem, since we weren't on the market yet? No, it was their problem.

    I had a 18% grade swing as a result of pointing this out to my chemistry teacher. She apologized over and over again. We also reporterd it anonymously to the company, which fixed it in their next version. But I discovered last year that as of two years ago my high school was still using the same version of the same flawed program, and it was still generating incorrect grades.

    A younger friend of mine pointed this out to the teachers. The response was the same as ten years ago: "Of course it's right, the computer did it."

    This is absolutely astonishing. It means that final grades produced by thousands of schools are not according to the criteria specified by the teachers and/or school and/or school district. If they are right, it is only the happiest of coincidences.

    • Nothing in the school system astonishes me. A while back I was staying with friends who are both teachers. They showed me the handout on evaluating reading problems that a visiting "expert" on reading instruction had given out. It was five or six pages long. It said nothing about the different kinds of reading problems and how you detect them. Basically, all it did was explain how to score the exam. That is, it explained, very slowly and carefully, that you subtract the number of incorrect answers from the

  • The unreliability wasn't the software's fault, it was due to operator misuse-- rather than following the normally expected operating procedure for an accurate simulation, the prosecution apparently just dropped all the simulated humans into a swimming pool and then deleted the ladders
  • A few facts (Score:5, Informative)

    by drang ( 165971 ) on Wednesday February 16, 2005 @11:38PM (#11696398)

    This may be shocking, but I am actually familiar with both this software and the process of giving expert testimony. PC-Crash is one of several *Crash* programs provided by different vendors that share a common lineage. It and its sister programs are used extensively in accident reconstruction and the results are presented to juries every day. The core of these *Crash* programs are a series of well-established (although certainly not perfect) algorithms and physical properties related to vehicle dynamics. The problem here was the extension to occupant dynamics, not the use of simulation programs in general.

    You may now return to your regular uniformed ranting.

  • by Animats ( 122034 ) on Thursday February 17, 2005 @02:24AM (#11697241) Homepage
    I wrote "Falling Bodies" [animats.com], a simulator for simulating humanoid characters banging around. So I know something about this.

    You cannot, even in theory, predict how a human with arms and legs banging around will move in a complex crash. It's chaotic, in the formal mathematical sense of the world. That is, an arbitrarily small change in the initial conditions can create a large change in the outcome. In Falling Bodies, if you change the low order digit of a double precision number in the initial conditions for a fall down a staircase, the simulations will start to diverge after about a second, and the fall may end quite differently.

    I had this discussion a few years ago with an Army officer who was trying to reduce accidents in parachute landings, and was considering using Falling Bodies. I talked him out of it.

    Auto collisions can be simulated well because there's one big mass that dominates the simulation. So you get a deterministic result within some error limits. Multibody systems with joints and links are quite different.

    Realistically, you can probably do a sound simulation which predicts how a passenger will bounce around from the beginning of the collision to the first passenger interior collision with the vehicle. Beyond that point, forget it.

    • You ought to be able to do a monte carlo simulation to obtain a probability distribution on the result. I.e. run the simulation with a large number of random but exact values within the uncertainty of the initial conditions, and count the results. If 80% of the simulations end with a broken leg, that is a likely outcome.

      Of course, you would still need to validate the results of the monte carlo simulation on (lots of) observed data, both to see if you got all the relevant factors in the determinstic model

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

Working...