四、閱讀測驗【請在下列各題中選出最適當的答案】 At the outskirts of Berlin, Michael Barillere-Scholz is testing a driverless vehicle that is neither stylish nor
futuristic. The vehicle is boxy and painted white. Its top speed barely reaches 20 miles per hour.
The self-driving vehicle is a shuttle with room for 12 passengers. Barillere-Scholz, who leads the driverless
research team at Deutsche Bahn, Germany’s largest train and bus operator, has been testing the vehicle around a
local office park. Later, the partly state-owned public transit company will begin separate trials of a similar
autonomous bus on public roads in southern Germany, connecting a local train station with stops along a
predetermined route.
“We want to show that autonomous cars don’t have to be limited to luxury consumer vehicles, they also have a
role in public transport,” Barillere-Scholz said. “The market in Germany for this type of vehicle is huge.”
The coming age of driverless cars has typically centered on Silicon Valley highfliers like Tesla, Uber and
Google, which have showcased their autonomous driving technology in luxury sedans and SUVs costing $100,000
or more. But across Europe, driverless projects like those by Deutsche Bahn are instead focused on practical
self-driving vehicles for mass transit.
Going without the latest automotive trends of aerodynamics and style, European transportation companies and
city planners are aiming to connect these unglamorous driverless vehicles to existing public transportation networks
of subways and buses. The goal is to eventually offer on-demand driverless services to those who cannot afford the
latest expensive offerings from Tesla and others.
While cities in the United States — including Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Las Vegas — have tested some of
these mass transit driverless vehicles, Europe is a particular hotbed of this activity. That is because of the region’s
densely packed urban areas and decades-old and widely used public transit systems, which often include subways,
trains and buses.
In total, more than 20 pilot or existing public transport programs have taken place in Europe involving
autonomous vehicles, according to a review by The New York Times. Most of these projects have received
government funding.
【題組】33. Roughly how fast (miles per hour) can the bus being tested by Barillere-Scholz go?
(A) 60
(B) 40
(C) 20
(D) 10