automated vehicle
The Role of Integrity Monitoring in Connected and Automated Vehicles: Current State-of-Practice and Future Directions
Nayak, Saswat Priyadarshi, Barth, Matthew
Connected and Automated Vehicle (CAV) research has gained traction in the last decade due to significant advancements in perception, navigation, communication, and control functions. Accurate and reliable position information is needed to meet the requirements of CAV applications, especially when safety is concerned. With the advent of various perception sensors (e.g. camera, LiDAR, etc.), the vehicular positioning system has improved both in accuracy and robustness. Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) and Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) based cooperative positioning can improve the accuracy of the position estimates, but the integrity risks involved in multi-sensor fusion in a cooperative environment have not yet been fully explored. This paper reviews existing research in the field of positioning Integrity Monitoring (IM) and identifies various research gaps. Particular attention has been placed on identifying research that highlights cooperative IM methods. This analysis helps pave the way for the development of new IM frameworks for cooperative positioning solutions in the future.
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- Asia (0.68)
- Europe > Germany (0.68)
- Overview (1.00)
- Research Report > New Finding (0.46)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (1.00)
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Towards Developing Socially Compliant Automated Vehicles: State of the Art, Experts Expectations, and A Conceptual Framework
Dong, Yongqi, van Arem, Bart, Farah, Haneen
Automated Vehicles (AVs) hold promise for revolutionizing transportation by improving road safety, traffic efficiency, and overall mobility. Despite the steady advancement in high-level AVs in recent years, the transition to full automation entails a period of mixed traffic, where AVs of varying automation levels coexist with human-driven vehicles (HDVs). Making AVs socially compliant and understood by human drivers is expected to improve the safety and efficiency of mixed traffic. Thus, ensuring AVs compatibility with HDVs and social acceptance is crucial for their successful and seamless integration into mixed traffic. However, research in this critical area of developing Socially Compliant AVs (SCAVs) remains sparse. This study carries out the first comprehensive scoping review to assess the current state of the art in developing SCAVs, identifying key concepts, methodological approaches, and research gaps. An expert interview was also conducted to identify critical research gaps and expectations towards SCAVs. Based on the scoping review and expert interview input, a conceptual framework is proposed for the development of SCAVs. The conceptual framework is evaluated using an online survey targeting researchers, technicians, policymakers, and other relevant professionals worldwide. The survey results provide valuable validation and insights, affirming the significance of the proposed conceptual framework in tackling the challenges of integrating AVs into mixed-traffic environments. Additionally, future research perspectives and suggestions are discussed, contributing to the research and development agenda of SCAVs.
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- Overview (0.93)
- Personal > Interview (0.54)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (1.00)
- Health & Medicine (1.00)
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High-Dimensional Fault Tolerance Testing of Highly Automated Vehicles Based on Low-Rank Models
Mei, Yuewen, Nie, Tong, Sun, Jian, Tian, Ye
Ensuring fault tolerance of Highly Automated Vehicles (HAVs) is crucial for their safety due to the presence of potentially severe faults. Hence, Fault Injection (FI) testing is conducted by practitioners to evaluate the safety level of HAVs. To fully cover test cases, various driving scenarios and fault settings should be considered. However, due to numerous combinations of test scenarios and fault settings, the testing space can be complex and high-dimensional. In addition, evaluating performance in all newly added scenarios is resource-consuming. The rarity of critical faults that can cause security problems further strengthens the challenge. To address these challenges, we propose to accelerate FI testing under the low-rank Smoothness Regularized Matrix Factorization (SRMF) framework. We first organize the sparse evaluated data into a structured matrix based on its safety values. Then the untested values are estimated by the correlation captured by the matrix structure. To address high dimensionality, a low-rank constraint is imposed on the testing space. To exploit the relationships between existing scenarios and new scenarios and capture the local regularity of critical faults, three types of smoothness regularization are further designed as a complement. We conduct experiments on car following and cut in scenarios. The results indicate that SRMF has the lowest prediction error in various scenarios and is capable of predicting rare critical faults compared to other machine learning models. In addition, SRMF can achieve 1171 acceleration rate, 99.3% precision and 91.1% F1 score in identifying critical faults. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to introduce low-rank models to FI testing of HAVs.
Conformal Prediction of Motion Control Performance for an Automated Vehicle in Presence of Actuator Degradations and Failures
Schubert, Richard, Loba, Marvin, Sünnemann, Jasper, Stolte, Torben, Maurer, Markus
Automated driving systems require monitoring mechanisms to ensure safe operation, especially if system components degrade or fail. Their runtime self-representation plays a key role as it provides a-priori knowledge about the system's capabilities and limitations. In this paper, we propose a data-driven approach for deriving such a self-representation model for the motion controller of an automated vehicle. A conformalized prediction model is learned and allows estimating how operational conditions as well as potential degradations and failures of the vehicle's actuators impact motion control performance. During runtime behavior generation, our predictor can provide a heuristic for determining the admissible action space.
- Automobiles & Trucks (1.00)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.89)
Gauging Public Acceptance of Conditionally Automated Vehicles in the United States
Saravanos, Antonios, Pissadaki, Eleftheria K., Singh, Wayne S., Delfino, Donatella
Public acceptance of conditionally automated vehicles is a crucial step in the realization of smart cities. Prior research in Europe has shown that the factors of hedonic motivation, social influence, and performance expectancy, in decreasing order of importance, influence acceptance. Moreover, a generally positive acceptance of the technology was reported. However, there is a lack of information regarding the public acceptance of conditionally automated vehicles in the United States. In this study, we carried out a web-based experiment where participants were provided information regarding the technology and then completed a questionnaire on their perceptions. The collected data was analyzed using PLS-SEM to examine the factors that may lead to public acceptance of the technology in the United States. Our findings showed that social influence, performance expectancy, effort expectancy, hedonic motivation, and facilitating conditions determine conditionally automated vehicle acceptance. Additionally, certain factors were found to influence the perception of how useful the technology is, the effort required to use it, and the facilitating conditions for its use. By integrating the insights gained from this study, stakeholders can better facilitate the adoption of autonomous vehicle technology, contributing to safer, more efficient, and user-friendly transportation systems in the future that help realize the vision of the smart city.
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- Transportation > Passenger (1.00)
- Transportation > Ground > Road (1.00)
- Information Technology > Robotics & Automation (1.00)
- Automobiles & Trucks > Manufacturer (1.00)
Generative Models and Connected and Automated Vehicles: A Survey in Exploring the Intersection of Transportation and AI
This report investigates the history and impact of Generative Models and Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs), two groundbreaking forces pushing progress in technology and transportation. By focusing on the application of generative models within the context of CAVs, the study aims to unravel how this integration could enhance predictive modeling, simulation accuracy, and decision-making processes in autonomous vehicles. This thesis discusses the benefits and challenges of integrating generative models and CAV technology in transportation. It aims to highlight the progress made, the remaining obstacles, and the potential for advancements in safety and innovation.
- North America > United States > Illinois > Cook County > Evanston (0.04)
- South America > Peru (0.04)
- North America > United States > Texas > Travis County > Austin (0.04)
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- Research Report > Promising Solution (0.93)
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Improving Explainable Object-induced Model through Uncertainty for Automated Vehicles
Ling, Shihong, Wan, Yue, Jia, Xiaowei, Du, Na
The rapid evolution of automated vehicles (AVs) has the potential to provide safer, more efficient, and comfortable travel options. However, these systems face challenges regarding reliability in complex driving scenarios. Recent explainable AV architectures neglect crucial information related to inherent uncertainties while providing explanations for actions. To overcome such challenges, our study builds upon the "object-induced" model approach that prioritizes the role of objects in scenes for decision-making and integrates uncertainty assessment into the decision-making process using an evidential deep learning paradigm with a Beta prior. Additionally, we explore several advanced training strategies guided by uncertainty, including uncertainty-guided data reweighting and augmentation. Leveraging the BDD-OIA dataset, our findings underscore that the model, through these enhancements, not only offers a clearer comprehension of AV decisions and their underlying reasoning but also surpasses existing baselines across a broad range of scenarios.
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.14)
- North America > United States > Colorado > Boulder County > Boulder (0.05)
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Allegheny County > Pittsburgh (0.05)
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- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Vision (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots > Autonomous Vehicles (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Representation & Reasoning (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Neural Networks > Deep Learning (0.49)
Typification of Driver Models Using Clustering Methods
The rapid development of automated driving systems in recent years has led to improvements in road safety and travel comfort. One typical function of these systems is Lane Keep Assist, which generally does not take human driving preferences into account. In our previous work, we have demonstrated that it is possible to implement a Lane Keep Assist function that is appropriate to human preferences using a trajectory planning algorithm based on a linear driving model. In our current work, we investigated how to separate the driving styles of individual drivers. We assumed that there are three driving styles: sporty, neutral and defensive. To prove these relations, clustering methods were applied to previously recorded measurements . Simulations with parameters describing the average behaviour of the classes (re-simulated with clustered types) showed that the resulting paths successfully classified drivers, that the 3 classes are distinct in their behaviour and that our model reproduces these behaviours.
- Asia > China (0.04)
- North America > United States > Virginia > Alexandria County > Alexandria (0.04)
- North America > United States > Pennsylvania > Allegheny County > Pittsburgh (0.04)
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- Transportation > Ground > Road (1.00)
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Curve Trajectory Model for Human Preferred Path Planning of Automated Vehicles
Igneczi, Gergo, Horvath, Erno, Toth, Roland, Nyilas, Krisztian
Automated driving systems are often used for lane keeping tasks. By these systems, a local path is planned ahead of the vehicle. However, these paths are often found unnatural by human drivers. We propose a linear driver model, which can calculate node points that reflect the preferences of human drivers and based on these node points a human driver preferred motion path can be designed for autonomous driving. The model input is the road curvature. We apply this model to a self-developed Euler-curve-based curve fitting algorithm. Through a case study, we show that the model based planned path can reproduce the average behavior of human curve path selection. We analyze the performance of the proposed model through statistical analysis that shows the validity of the captured relations.
- Transportation > Ground > Road (0.53)
- Information Technology > Robotics & Automation (0.53)
- Automobiles & Trucks (0.53)
Overcoming the Fear of the Dark: Occlusion-Aware Model-Predictive Planning for Automated Vehicles Using Risk Fields
van der Ploeg, Chris, Nyberg, Truls, Sánchez, José Manuel Gaspar, Silvas, Emilia, van de Wouw, Nathan
As vehicle automation advances, motion planning algorithms face escalating challenges in achieving safe and efficient navigation. Existing Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) primarily focus on basic tasks, leaving unexpected scenarios for human intervention, which can be error-prone. Motion planning approaches for higher levels of automation in the state-of-the-art are primarily oriented toward the use of risk- or anti-collision constraints, using over-approximates of the shapes and sizes of other road users to prevent collisions. These methods however suffer from conservative behavior and the risk of infeasibility in high-risk initial conditions. In contrast, our work introduces a novel multi-objective trajectory generation approach. We propose an innovative method for constructing risk fields that accommodates diverse entity shapes and sizes, which allows us to also account for the presence of potentially occluded objects. This methodology is integrated into an occlusion-aware trajectory generator, enabling dynamic and safe maneuvering through intricate environments while anticipating (potentially hidden) road users and traveling along the infrastructure toward a specific goal. Through theoretical underpinnings and simulations, we validate the effectiveness of our approach. This paper bridges crucial gaps in motion planning for automated vehicles, offering a pathway toward safer and more adaptable autonomous navigation in complex urban contexts.