49 research outputs found
Advanced Sensing and Control for Connected and Automated Vehicles
Connected and automated vehicles (CAVs) are a transformative technology that is expected to change and improve the safety and efficiency of mobility. As the main functional components of CAVs, advanced sensing technologies and control algorithms, which gather environmental information, process data, and control vehicle motion, are of great importance. The development of novel sensing technologies for CAVs has become a hotspot in recent years. Thanks to improved sensing technologies, CAVs are able to interpret sensory information to further detect obstacles, localize their positions, navigate themselves, and interact with other surrounding vehicles in the dynamic environment. Furthermore, leveraging computer vision and other sensing methods, in-cabin humans’ body activities, facial emotions, and even mental states can also be recognized. Therefore, the aim of this Special Issue has been to gather contributions that illustrate the interest in the sensing and control of CAVs
Coordination and Self-Adaptive Communication Primitives for Low-Power Wireless Networks
The Internet of Things (IoT) is a recent trend where objects are augmented with computing and communication capabilities, often via low-power wireless radios. The Internet of Things is an enabler for a connected and more sustainable modern society: smart grids are deployed to improve energy production and consumption, wireless monitoring systems allow smart factories to detect faults early and reduce waste, while connected vehicles coordinate on the road to ensure our safety and save fuel. Many recent IoT applications have stringent requirements for their wireless communication substrate: devices must cooperate and coordinate, must perform efficiently under varying and sometimes extreme environments, while strict deadlines must be met. Current distributed coordination algorithms have high overheads and are unfit to meet the requirements of today\u27s wireless applications, while current wireless protocols are often best-effort and lack the guarantees provided by well-studied coordination solutions. Further, many communication primitives available today lack the ability to adapt to dynamic environments, and are often tuned during their design phase to reach a target performance, rather than be continuously updated at runtime to adapt to reality.In this thesis, we study the problem of efficient and low-latency consensus in the context of low-power wireless networks, where communication is unreliable and nodes can fail, and we investigate the design of a self-adaptive wireless stack, where the communication substrate is able to adapt to changes to its environment. We propose three new communication primitives: Wireless Paxos brings fault-tolerant consensus to low-power wireless networking, STARC is a middleware for safe vehicular coordination at intersections, while Dimmer builds on reinforcement learning to provide adaptivity to low-power wireless networks. We evaluate in-depth each primitive on testbed deployments and we provide an open-source implementation to enable their use and improvement by the community
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Cooperative Vehicular Platooning (Co-VP) is a paradigmatic example of a Cooperative Cyber-Physical System (Co-CPS), which holds the potential to vastly improve
road safety by partially removing humans from the driving task. However, the challenges are substantial, as the domain involves several topics, such as control theory,
communications, vehicle dynamics, security, and traffic engineering, that must be
coupled to describe, develop and validate these systems of systems accurately. This
work presents a comprehensive survey of significant and recent advances in Co-VP relevant fields. We start by overviewing the work on control strategies and underlying communication infrastructures, focusing on their interplay. We also address a fundamental concern by presenting a cyber-security overview regarding these systems. Furthermore, we present and compare the primary initiatives to test and validate those systems, including simulation tools, hardware-in-the-loop setups, and vehicular testbeds. Finally, we highlight a few open challenges in the Co-VP domain. This work aims to provide a fundamental overview of highly relevant works on Co-VP topics, particularly by exposing their inter-dependencies, facilitating a guide that will support further developments in this challenging field.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Secure Harmonized Speed Under Byzantine Faults for Autonomous Vehicle Platoons Using Blockchain Technology
Autonomous Vehicle (AV) platooning holds the promise of safer and more efficient road transportation. By coordinating the movements of a group of vehicles, platooning offers benefits such as reduced energy consumption, lower emissions, and improved traffic flow. However, the realization of these advantages hinges on the ability of platooning vehicles to reach a consensus and maintain secure, cooperative behavior.
Byzantine behavior [1,2], characterized by vehicles transmitting incorrect or conflicting information, threatens the integrity of platoon coordination. Vehicles within the platoon share vital data such as position, speed, and other relevant information to optimize their operation, ensuring safe and efficient driving. However, Byzantine behavior in AV platoons presents a critical challenge by disrupting coordinated operations. Consequently, the malicious transmission of conflicting information can lead to safety compromises, traffic disruptions, energy inefficiency, loss of trust, chain reactions of faults, and legal complexities [3,4].
In this light, this thesis delves into the challenges posed by Byzantine behavior within platoons and presents a robust solution using ConsenCar; a blockchain-based protocol for AV platoons which aims to address Byzantine faults in order to maintain reliable and secure platoon operations.
Recognizing the complex obstacles presented by Byzantine faults in these critical real-time systems, this research exploits the potential of blockchain technology to establish Byzantine Fault Tolerance (BFT) through Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communications over a Vehicular Ad hoc NETwork (VANET). The operational procedure of ConsenCar involves several stages, including proposal validation, decision-making, and eliminating faulty vehicles. In instances such as speed harmonization, the decentralized network framework enables vehicles to exchange messages to ultimately agree on a harmonized speed that
maximizes safety and efficiency. Notably, ConsenCar is designed to detect and isolate vehicles displaying Byzantine behavior, ensuring that their actions do not compromise the integrity of decision-making. Consequently, ConsenCar results in a robust assurance that all non-faulty vehicles converge on unanimous decisions.
By testing ConsenCar on the speed harmonization operation, simulation results indicate that under the presence of Byzantine behavior, the protocol successfully detects and eliminates faulty vehicles, provided that more than two-thirds of the vehicles are non-faulty. This allows non-faulty vehicles to achieve secure harmonized speed and maintain safe platoon operations. As such, the protocol generalizes to secure other platooning operations, including splitting and merging, intersection negotiation, lane-changing, and others. The implications of this research are significant for the future of AV platooning, as it establishes BFT to enhance the safety, efficiency, and reliability of AV transportation, therefore paving the way for improved security and cooperative road ecosystems
Failure Analysis in Next-Generation Critical Cellular Communication Infrastructures
The advent of communication technologies marks a transformative phase in
critical infrastructure construction, where the meticulous analysis of failures
becomes paramount in achieving the fundamental objectives of continuity,
security, and availability. This survey enriches the discourse on failures,
failure analysis, and countermeasures in the context of the next-generation
critical communication infrastructures. Through an exhaustive examination of
existing literature, we discern and categorize prominent research orientations
with focuses on, namely resource depletion, security vulnerabilities, and
system availability concerns. We also analyze constructive countermeasures
tailored to address identified failure scenarios and their prevention.
Furthermore, the survey emphasizes the imperative for standardization in
addressing failures related to Artificial Intelligence (AI) within the ambit of
the sixth-generation (6G) networks, accounting for the forward-looking
perspective for the envisioned intelligence of 6G network architecture. By
identifying new challenges and delineating future research directions, this
survey can help guide stakeholders toward unexplored territories, fostering
innovation and resilience in critical communication infrastructure development
and failure prevention
Infraestrutura de beira de estrada para apoio a sistemas cooperativos e inteligentes de transportes
The growing need of mobility along with the evolution of the automotive industry
and the massification of the personal vehicle amplifies some of the road-related
problems such as safety and traffic congestion. To mitigate such issues, the evolution
towards cooperative communicating technologies and autonomous systems
is considered a solution to overcome the human physical limitations and the limited
perception horizon of on-board sensors. Short-range vehicular communications
such as Vehicle-to-Vehicle or Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (ETSI ITS-G5) in conjunction
with long-range cellular communications (LTE,5G) and standardized messages,
emerge as viable solutions to amplify the benefits that standalone technologies can
bring to the road environment, by covering a wide array of applications and use
cases. In compliance with the standardization work from European Telecommunications
Standards Institute (ETSI), this dissertation describes the implementation of
the collective perception service in a real road infrastructure to assist the maneuvers
of autonomous vehicles and provide information to a central road operator. This
work is focused on building standardized collective perception messages (CPM)
by retrieving information from traffic classification radars (installed in the PASMO
project) for local dissemination using ETSI ITS-G5 radio technology and creating
a redundant communication channel between the road infrastructure and a central
traffic control centre, located at the Instituto de Telecomunicações - Aveiro, taking
advantage of cellular, point-to-point radio links and optical fiber communications.
The output of the messages are shown to the user by a mobile application. The
service is further improved by building an algorithm for optimizing the message
dissemination to improve channel efficiency in more demanding scenarios. The results
of the experimental tests showed that the time delay between the production
event of the collective perception message and the reception by other ITS stations
is within the boundaries defined by ETSI standards. Moreover, the algorithm for
message dissemination also shows to increase radio channel efficiency by limiting
the number of objects disseminated by CPM messages. The collective perception
service developed and the road infrastructure are therefore, a valuable asset to
provide useful information for improving road safety and fostering the deployment
of intelligent cooperative transportation systems.A crescente necessidade de mobilidade em paralelo com a evolução da indústria automóvel
e com a massificação do uso de meios de transportes pessoais, têm vindo
a amplificar alguns problemas dos transportes rodoviários, tais como a segurança
e o congestionamento do tráfego. Para mitigar estas questões, a evolução das
tecnologias de comunicação cooperativas e dos sistemas autónomos é vista como
uma potencial solução para ultrapassar limitações dos condutores e do horizonte
de perceção dos sensores veículares. Comunicações de curto alcance, tais como
Veículo-a-Veículo ou Veículo-a-Infrastrutura (ETSI ITS-G5), em conjunto com comunicações
móveis de longo alcance (LTE,5G) e mensagens padrão, emergem como
soluções viáveis para amplificar todos os beneficios que tecnologias independentes
podem trazer para o ambiente rodoviário, cobrindo um grande leque de aplicações
e casos de uso da estrada. Em conformidade com o trabalho de padronização
da European Telecommunications Standards Institute, esta dissertação descreve
a implementação do serviço de perceção coletiva, numa infrastrutura rodoviária
real, para suporte a manobras de veículos autónomos e para fornecer informações
aos operadores de estradas. Este trabalho foca-se na construção de mensagens
de perceção coletiva a partir de informação gerada por radares de classificação de
tráfego (instalados no âmbito do projeto PASMO) para disseminação local usando
a tecnologia rádio ETSI ITS-G5 e criando um canal de comunicação redundante
entre a infraestrutura rodóviaria e um centro de controlo de tráfego localizado no
Instituto de Telecomunicações - Aveiro, usando para isso: redes móveis, ligações
rádio ponto a ponto e fibra ótica. O conteúdo destas messagens é mostrado ao
utilizador através de uma aplicação móvel. O serviço é ainda melhorado, tendo-se
para tal desenvolvido um algoritmo de otimização de disseminação das mensagens,
tendo em vista melhorar a eficiência do canal de transmissão em cenários mais exigentes.
Os resultados dos testes experimentais efetuados revelaram que o tempo
de atraso entre o evento de produção de uma mensagem de perceção coletiva e a
receção por outra estação ITS, usando comunicações ITS-G5, se encontra dentro
dos limites definidos pelos padrões da ETSI. Além disso, o algoritmo para disseminação
de mensagens também mostrou aumentar a eficiência do canal de rádio,
limitando o número de objetos disseminados pelas mesmas. Assim, o serviço de
perceção coletiva desenvolvido poderá ser uma ferramenta valiosa, contribuindo
para o aumento da segurança rodóviaria e para a disseminação da utilização dos
sistemas cooperativos de transporte inteligente.Mestrado em Engenharia Eletrónica e Telecomunicaçõe
Security of Cyber-Physical Systems
Cyber-physical system (CPS) innovations, in conjunction with their sibling computational and technological advancements, have positively impacted our society, leading to the establishment of new horizons of service excellence in a variety of applicational fields. With the rapid increase in the application of CPSs in safety-critical infrastructures, their safety and security are the top priorities of next-generation designs. The extent of potential consequences of CPS insecurity is large enough to ensure that CPS security is one of the core elements of the CPS research agenda. Faults, failures, and cyber-physical attacks lead to variations in the dynamics of CPSs and cause the instability and malfunction of normal operations. This reprint discusses the existing vulnerabilities and focuses on detection, prevention, and compensation techniques to improve the security of safety-critical systems
New Technology and Automation in Freight Transport and Handling Systems
This is an evidence review that examines the trends in manufacturing and global supply chains, looking at the international trade, technology and users, and how these may change between now and 2040. The review has been commissioned by the Government Office for Science within the Foresight project. The Foresight Future of Mobility project is run from within the UK Government Office for Science (GO-Science). The Foresight project was launched to try to understand the broad question "What benefits/ opportunities could the transport system of the future provide and what are the implications for Government and society?