With the whole Hamilton/Rosberg data sharing spat, as well as comments about a certain driver's ability to understand the data even if he has access to it, I was pondering if that is relevant in the modern F1 age, and how automated data analysis has come along over the past few years.
Here's a couple of images from public releases of the baseline F1 telemetry (appropriately Senna and Hamilton).
1989: Senna at Suzuka
2012: Hamilton at Spa
What is striking is that a) the plots have changed so little over the years, and b) after 23 years they are still drawing conclusions in the garage by writing on a plot in pen.
I would have thought that modern data analysis software could have automated some of that work by now, correlating cause and effect, comparing driver A to driver B, lap 1 to lap 2 etc. to indicate automatically areas of delta, possible causes and solutions. And the output would be a much richer report that offers better insights and a set of conclusions, options and solutions (in terms of car and driver behaviour). Simple things would be:
- simple 80/20 observations e.g. 0.5 seconds slower on main straight is main cause of 0.6 slower overall lap time
- identifying the cause of slower lap times e.g. lower revs in a certain corner, earlier braking, low top end revs
- correlations in data e.g. lower top speed correlated to lower exit speed from previous corner
- anti-correlations e.g. higher exit speed but lower top speed, later braking but slower exit
- trajectory discrepancies e.g. driver A has a faster corner time and takes a different path to driver B
- sub-sector information e.g. he changes gear at meter 250 while you wait until 275
- percentages e.g. you spend 30% of the lap on the brakes, he spends 25%, here's the two corners where the 5% is lost
- cause & effect e.g. same exit speed, same revs at end of straight, 15kph lower top speed -> too much drag, reduce wing
And so on. Of course with experience they can get these results manually, but there must be hundreds of opportunities to get automated conclusions immediately, as part of the basic system output, and present them in a more useful manner that drivers can immediately understand.
I expect they have some systems for this, at least in the back office. Does anybody know of anything?