239 research outputs found
Limited Visibility and Uncertainty Aware Motion Planning for Automated Driving
Adverse weather conditions and occlusions in urban environments result in
impaired perception. The uncertainties are handled in different modules of an
automated vehicle, ranging from sensor level over situation prediction until
motion planning. This paper focuses on motion planning given an uncertain
environment model with occlusions. We present a method to remain collision free
for the worst-case evolution of the given scene. We define criteria that
measure the available margins to a collision while considering visibility and
interactions, and consequently integrate conditions that apply these criteria
into an optimization-based motion planner. We show the generality of our method
by validating it in several distinct urban scenarios
도심 교차로에서의 자율주행을 위한 주변 차량 경로 예측 및 거동 계획 알고리즘
학위논문(박사)--서울대학교 대학원 :공과대학 기계항공공학부,2020. 2. 이경수.차랑용 센싱 및 처리기술이 발달함에 따라 자동차 기술 연구가 수동 안전 기술에서 능동 안전 기술로 초점이 확장되고 있다. 최근, 주요 자동차 제작사들은 능동형 차간거리 제어, 차선 유지 보조, 그리고 긴급 자동 제동과 같은 능동 안전 기술이 이미 상업화하고 있다. 이러한 기술적 진보는 사상률 제로를 달성하기 위하여 기술 연구 분야를 능동 안전 기술을 넘어서 자율주행 시스템으로 확장시키고 있다. 특히, 도심 도로는 인도, 사각지대, 주차차량, 이륜차, 보행자 등과 같은 교통 위험 요소를 많이 갖고 있기 때문에 고속도로보다 사고 발생률과 사상률이 높으며, 이는 도심 도로에서의 자율주행은 핵심 이슈가 되고 있다. 많은 프로젝트들이 자율주행의 환경적, 인구학적, 사회적, 그리고 경제적 측면에서의 자율주행의 효과를 평가하기 위해 수행되었거나 수행 중에 있다. 예를 들어, 유럽의 AdaptIVE는 다양한 자율주행 기능을 개발하였으며, 구체적인 평가 방법론을 개발하였다. 또한, CityMobil2는 유럽 전역의 9개의 다른 환경에서 무인 지능형 차량을 성공적으로 통합하였다. 일본에서는 2014년 5월에 시작된 Automated Driving System Research Project는 자율주행 시스템과 차세대 도심 교통 수단의 개발 및 검증에 초점을 맞추었다.
기존 연구들에 대한 조사를 통해 자율주행 시스템은 교통 참여자들의 안전도를 향상시키고, 교통 혼잡을 감소시키며, 운전자 편의성을 증진시키는 것이 증명되었다. 다양한 방법론들이 인지, 거동 계획, 그리고 제어와 같은 도심 도로 자율주행차의 핵심 기술들을 개발하기 위하여 사용되었다. 하지만 많은 최신의 자율주행 연구들은 각 기술의 개발을 별개로 고려하여 진행해왔다. 결과적으로 통합적인 관점에서의 자율주행 기술 설계는 아직 충분히 고려되어 않았다.
따라서, 본 논문은 복잡한 도심 도로 환경에서 라이다, 카메라, GPS, 그리고 간단한 경로 맵에 기반한 완전 자율주행 알고리즘을 개발하는 것을 목표로 하였다. 제안된 자율주행 알고리즘은 비통제 교차로를 포함한 도심 도로 상황을 차량 거동 예측기와 모델 예측 제어 기법에 기반하여 설계되었다. 본 논문은 동적, 정적 환경 표현 및 종횡방향 거동 계획을 중점적으로 다루었다.
본 논문은 도심 도로 자율주행을 위한 거동 계획 알고리즘의 개요를 제시하였으며, 실제 교통 상황에서의 실험 결과는 제안된 알고리즘의 효과성과 운전자 거동과의 유사성을 보여주었다. 실차 실험 결과는 비통제 교차로를 포함한 도심 시나리오에서의 강건한 성능을 보여주었다.The foci of automotive researches have been expanding from passive safety systems to active safety systems with advances in sensing and processing technologies. Recently, the majority of automotive makers have already commercialized active safety systems, such as adaptive cruise control (ACC), lane keeping assistance (LKA), and autonomous emergency braking (AEB). Such advances have extended the research field beyond active safety systems to automated driving systems to achieve zero fatalities. Especially, automated driving on urban roads has become a key issue because urban roads possess numerous risk factors for traffic accidents, such as sidewalks, blind spots, on-street parking, motorcycles, and pedestrians, which cause higher accident rates and fatalities than motorways. Several projects have been conducted, and many others are still underway to evaluate the effects of automated driving in environmental, demographic, social, and economic aspects. For example, the European project AdaptIVe, develops various automated driving functions and defines specific evaluation methodologies. In addition, CityMobil2 successfully integrates driverless intelligent vehicles in nine other environments throughout Europe. In Japan, the Automated Driving System Research Project began on May 2014, which focuses on the development and verification of automated driving systems and next-generation urban transportation.
From a careful review of a considerable amount of literature, automated driving systems have been proven to increase the safety of traffic users, reduce traffic congestion, and improve driver convenience. Various methodologies have been employed to develop the core technology of automated vehicles on urban roads, such as perception, motion planning, and control. However, the current state-of-the-art automated driving algorithms focus on the development of each technology separately. Consequently, designing automated driving systems from an integrated perspective is not yet sufficiently considered.
Therefore, this dissertation focused on developing a fully autonomous driving algorithm in urban complex scenarios using LiDAR, vision, GPS, and a simple path map. The proposed autonomous driving algorithm covered the urban road scenarios with uncontrolled intersections based on vehicle motion prediction and model predictive control approach. Mainly, four research issues are considered: dynamic/static environment representation, and longitudinal/lateral motion planning.
In the remainder of this thesis, we will provide an overview of the proposed motion planning algorithm for urban autonomous driving and the experimental results in real traffic, which showed the effectiveness and human-like behaviors of the proposed algorithm. The proposed algorithm has been tested and evaluated using both simulation and vehicle tests. The test results show the robust performance of urban scenarios, including uncontrolled intersections.Chapter 1 Introduction 1
1.1. Background and Motivation 1
1.2. Previous Researches 4
1.3. Thesis Objectives 9
1.4. Thesis Outline 10
Chapter 2 Overview of Motion Planning for Automated Driving System 11
Chapter 3 Dynamic Environment Representation with Motion Prediction 15
3.1. Moving Object Classification 17
3.2. Vehicle State based Direct Motion Prediction 20
3.2.1. Data Collection Vehicle 22
3.2.2. Target Roads 23
3.2.3. Dataset Selection 24
3.2.4. Network Architecture 25
3.2.5. Input and Output Features 33
3.2.6. Encoder and Decoder 33
3.2.7. Sequence Length 34
3.3. Road Structure based Interactive Motion Prediction 36
3.3.1. Maneuver Definition 38
3.3.2. Network Architecture 39
3.3.3. Path Following Model based State Predictor 47
3.3.4. Estimation of predictor uncertainty 50
3.3.5. Motion Parameter Estimation 53
3.3.6. Interactive Maneuver Prediction 56
3.4. Intersection Approaching Vehicle Motion Prediction 59
3.4.1. Driver Behavior Model at Intersections 59
3.4.2. Intention Inference based State Prediction 63
Chapter 4 Static Environment Representation 67
4.1. Static Obstacle Map Construction 69
4.2. Free Space Boundary Decision 74
4.3. Drivable Corridor Decision 76
Chapter 5 Longitudinal Motion Planning 81
5.1. In-Lane Target Following 82
5.2. Proactive Motion Planning for Narrow Road Driving 85
5.2.1. Motivation for Collision Preventive Velocity Planning 85
5.2.2. Desired Acceleration Decision 86
5.3. Uncontrolled Intersection 90
5.3.1. Driving Phase and Mode Definition 91
5.3.2. State Machine for Driving Mode Decision 92
5.3.3. Motion Planner for Approach Mode 95
5.3.4. Motion Planner for Risk Management Phase 98
Chapter 6 Lateral Motion Planning 105
6.1. Vehicle Model 107
6.2. Cost Function and Constraints 109
Chapter 7 Performance Evaluation 115
7.1. Motion Prediction 115
7.1.1. Prediction Accuracy Analysis of Vehicle State based Direct Motion Predictor 115
7.1.2. Prediction Accuracy and Effect Analysis of Road Structure based Interactive Motion Predictor 122
7.2. Prediction based Distance Control at Urban Roads 132
7.2.1. Driving Data Analysis of Direct Motion Predictor Application at Urban Roads 133
7.2.2. Case Study of Vehicle Test at Urban Roads 138
7.2.3. Analysis of Vehicle Test Results on Urban Roads 147
7.3. Complex Urban Roads 153
7.3.1. Case Study of Vehicle Test at Complex Urban Roads 154
7.3.2. Closed-loop Simulation based Safety Analysis 162
7.4. Uncontrolled Intersections 164
7.4.1. Simulation based Algorithm Comparison of Motion Planner 164
7.4.2. Monte-Carlo Simulation based Safety Analysis 166
7.4.3. Vehicle Tests Results in Real Traffic Conditions 172
7.4.4. Similarity Analysis between Human and Automated Vehicle 194
7.5. Multi-Lane Turn Intersections 197
7.5.1. Case Study of a Multi-Lane Left Turn Scenario 197
7.5.2. Analysis of Motion Planning Application Results 203
Chapter 8 Conclusion & Future Works 207
8.1. Conclusion 207
8.2. Future Works 209
Bibliography 210
Abstract in Korean 219Docto
Behavioural strategy for indoor mobile robot navigation in dynamic environments
PhD ThesisDevelopment of behavioural strategies for indoor mobile navigation has become a challenging
and practical issue in a cluttered indoor environment, such as a hospital or factory, where
there are many static and moving objects, including humans and other robots, all of which
trying to complete their own specific tasks; some objects may be moving in a similar direction
to the robot, whereas others may be moving in the opposite direction. The key requirement
for any mobile robot is to avoid colliding with any object which may prevent it from reaching
its goal, or as a consequence bring harm to any individual within its workspace. This challenge
is further complicated by unobserved objects suddenly appearing in the robots path,
particularly when the robot crosses a corridor or an open doorway. Therefore the mobile
robot must be able to anticipate such scenarios and manoeuvre quickly to avoid collisions.
In this project, a hybrid control architecture has been designed to navigate within dynamic
environments. The control system includes three levels namely: deliberative, intermediate
and reactive, which work together to achieve short, fast and safe navigation. The deliberative
level creates a short and safe path from the current position of the mobile robot to its goal
using the wavefront algorithm, estimates the current location of the mobile robot, and extracts
the region from which unobserved objects may appear. The intermediate level links the
deliberative level and the reactive level, that includes several behaviours for implementing
the global path in such a way to avoid any collision.
In avoiding dynamic obstacles, the controller has to identify and extract obstacles from the
sensor data, estimate their speeds, and then regular its speed and direction to minimize the
collision risk and maximize the speed to the goal. The velocity obstacle approach (VO) is
considered an easy and simple method for avoiding dynamic obstacles, whilst the collision
cone principle is used to detect the collision situation between two circular-shaped objects.
However the VO approach has two challenges when applied in indoor environments. The
first challenge is extraction of collision cones of non-circular objects from sensor data, in
which applying fitting circle methods generally produces large and inaccurate collision cones
especially for line-shaped obstacle such as walls. The second challenge is that the mobile
robot cannot sometimes move to its goal because all its velocities to the goal are located
within collision cones. In this project, a method has been demonstrated to extract the colliii
sion cones of circular and non-circular objects using a laser sensor, where the obstacle size
and the collision time are considered to weigh the robot velocities. In addition the principle
of the virtual obstacle was proposed to minimize the collision risk with unobserved moving
obstacles. The simulation and experiments using the proposed control system on a Pioneer
mobile robot showed that the mobile robot can successfully avoid static and dynamic obstacles.
Furthermore the mobile robot was able to reach its target within an indoor environment
without causing any collision or missing the target
Pedestrian and Vehicle Detection in Autonomous Vehicle Perception Systems—A Review
Autonomous Vehicles (AVs) have the potential to solve many traffic problems, such as accidents, congestion and pollution. However, there are still challenges to overcome, for instance, AVs need to accurately perceive their environment to safely navigate in busy urban scenarios. The aim of this paper is to review recent articles on computer vision techniques that can be used to build an AV perception system. AV perception systems need to accurately detect non-static objects and predict their behaviour, as well as to detect static objects and recognise the information they are providing. This paper, in particular, focuses on the computer vision techniques used to detect pedestrians and vehicles. There have been many papers and reviews on pedestrians and vehicles detection so far. However, most of the past papers only reviewed pedestrian or vehicle detection separately. This review aims to present an overview of the AV systems in general, and then review and investigate several detection computer vision techniques for pedestrians and vehicles. The review concludes that both traditional and Deep Learning (DL) techniques have been used for pedestrian and vehicle detection; however, DL techniques have shown the best results. Although good detection results have been achieved for pedestrians and vehicles, the current algorithms still struggle to detect small, occluded, and truncated objects. In addition, there is limited research on how to improve detection performance in difficult light and weather conditions. Most of the algorithms have been tested on well-recognised datasets such as Caltech and KITTI; however, these datasets have their own limitations. Therefore, this paper recommends that future works should be implemented on more new challenging datasets, such as PIE and BDD100K.EPSRC DTP PhD studentshi
An enactive approach to perceptual augmentation in mobility
Event predictions are an important constituent of situation awareness, which is a key objective for many applications in human-machine interaction, in particular in driver assistance. This work focuses on facilitating event predictions in dynamic environments. Its primary contributions are 1) the theoretical development of an approach for enabling people to expand their sampling and understanding of spatiotemporal information, 2) the introduction of exemplary systems that are guided by this approach, 3) the empirical investigation of effects functional prototypes of these systems have on human behavior and safety in a range of simulated road traffic scenarios, and 4) a connection of the investigated approach to work on cooperative human-machine systems. More specific contents of this work are summarized as follows:
The first part introduces several challenges for the formation of situation awareness as a requirement for safe traffic participation. It reviews existing work on these challenges in the domain of driver assistance, resulting in an identification of the need to better inform drivers about dynamically changing aspects of a scene, including event probabilities, spatial and temporal distances, as well as a suggestion to expand the scope of assistance systems to start informing drivers about relevant scene elements at an early stage. Novel forms of assistance can be guided by different fundamental approaches that target either replacement, distribution, or augmentation of driver competencies. A subsequent differentiation of these approaches concludes that an augmentation-guided paradigm, characterized by an integration of machine capabilities into human feedback loops, can be advantageous for tasks that rely on active user engagement, the preservation of awareness and competence, and the minimization of complexity in human- machine interaction. Consequently, findings and theories about human sensorimotor processes are connected to develop an enactive approach that is consistent with an augmentation perspective on human-machine interaction. The approach is characterized by enabling drivers to exercise new sensorimotor processes through which safety-relevant spatiotemporal information may be sampled.
In the second part of this work, a concept and functional prototype for augmenting the perception of traffic dynamics is introduced as a first example for applying principles of this enactive approach. As a loose expression of functional biomimicry, the prototype utilizes a tactile inter- face that communicates temporal distances to potential hazards continuously through stimulus intensity. In a driving simulator study, participants quickly gained an intuitive understanding of the assistance without instructions and demonstrated higher driving safety in safety-critical highway scenarios. But this study also raised new questions such as whether benefits are due to a continuous time-intensity encoding and whether utility generalizes to intersection scenarios or highway driving with low criticality events. Effects of an expanded assistance prototype with lane-independent risk assessment and an option for binary signaling were thus investigated in a separate driving simulator study. Subjective responses confirmed quick signal understanding and a perception of spatial and temporal stimulus characteristics. Surprisingly, even for a binary assistance variant with a constant intensity level, participants reported perceiving a danger-dependent variation in stimulus intensity. They further felt supported by the system in the driving task, especially in difficult situations. But in contrast to the first study, this support was not expressed by changes in driving safety, suggesting that perceptual demands of the low criticality scenarios could be satisfied by existing driver capabilities. But what happens if such basic capabilities are impaired, e.g., due to poor visibility conditions or other situations that introduce perceptual uncertainty? In a third driving simulator study, the driver assistance was employed specifically in such ambiguous situations and produced substantial safety advantages over unassisted driving. Additionally, an assistance variant that adds an encoding of spatial uncertainty was investigated in these scenarios. Participants had no difficulties to understand and utilize this added signal dimension to improve safety. Despite being inherently less informative than spatially precise signals, users rated uncertainty-encoding signals as equally useful and satisfying. This appreciation for transparency of variable assistance reliability is a promising indicator for the feasibility of an adaptive trust calibration in human-machine interaction and marks one step towards a closer integration of driver and vehicle capabilities.
A complementary step on the driver side would be to increase transparency about the driver’s mental states and thus allow for mutual adaptation. The final part of this work discusses how such prerequisites of cooperation may be achieved by monitoring mental state correlates observable in human behavior, especially in eye movements. Furthermore, the outlook for an addition of cooperative features also raises new questions about the bounds of identity as well as practical consequences of human-machine systems in which co-adapting agents may exercise sensorimotor processes through one another.Die Vorhersage von Ereignissen ist ein Bestandteil des Situationsbewusstseins, dessen Unterstützung ein wesentliches Ziel diverser Anwendungen im Bereich Mensch-Maschine Interaktion ist, insbesondere in der Fahrerassistenz. Diese Arbeit zeigt Möglichkeiten auf, Menschen bei Vorhersagen in dynamischen Situationen im Straßenverkehr zu unterstützen. Zentrale Beiträge der Arbeit sind 1) eine theoretische Auseinandersetzung mit der Aufgabe, die menschliche Wahrnehmung und das Verständnis von raum-zeitlichen Informationen im Straßenverkehr zu erweitern, 2) die Einführung beispielhafter Systeme, die aus dieser Betrachtung hervorgehen, 3) die empirische Untersuchung der Auswirkungen dieser Systeme auf das Nutzerverhalten und die Fahrsicherheit in simulierten Verkehrssituationen und 4) die Verknüpfung der untersuchten Ansätze mit Arbeiten an kooperativen Mensch-Maschine Systemen. Die Arbeit ist in drei Teile gegliedert:
Der erste Teil stellt einige Herausforderungen bei der Bildung von Situationsbewusstsein vor, welches für die sichere Teilnahme am Straßenverkehr notwendig ist. Aus einem Vergleich dieses Überblicks mit früheren Arbeiten zeigt sich, dass eine Notwendigkeit besteht, Fahrer besser über dynamische Aspekte von Fahrsituationen zu informieren. Dies umfasst unter anderem Ereigniswahrscheinlichkeiten, räumliche und zeitliche Distanzen, sowie eine frühere Signalisierung relevanter Elemente in der Umgebung.
Neue Formen der Assistenz können sich an verschiedenen grundlegenden Ansätzen der Mensch-Maschine Interaktion orientieren, die entweder auf einen Ersatz, eine Verteilung oder eine Erweiterung von Fahrerkompetenzen abzielen. Die Differenzierung dieser Ansätze legt den Schluss nahe, dass ein von Kompetenzerweiterung geleiteter Ansatz für die Bewältigung jener Aufgaben von Vorteil ist, bei denen aktiver Nutzereinsatz, die Erhaltung bestehender Kompetenzen und Situationsbewusstsein gefordert sind. Im Anschluss werden Erkenntnisse und Theorien über menschliche sensomotorische Prozesse verknüpft, um einen enaktiven Ansatz der Mensch-Maschine Interaktion zu entwickeln, der einer erweiterungsgeleiteten Perspektive Rechnung trägt. Dieser Ansatz soll es Fahrern ermöglichen, sicherheitsrelevante raum-zeitliche Informationen über neue sensomotorische Prozesse zu erfassen.
Im zweiten Teil der Arbeit wird ein Konzept und funktioneller Prototyp zur Erweiterung der Wahrnehmung von Verkehrsdynamik als ein erstes Beispiel zur Anwendung der Prinzipien dieses enaktiven Ansatzes vorgestellt. Dieser Prototyp nutzt vibrotaktile Aktuatoren zur Kommunikation von Richtungen und zeitlichen Distanzen zu möglichen Gefahrenquellen über die Aktuatorposition und -intensität. Teilnehmer einer Fahrsimulationsstudie waren in der Lage, in kurzer Zeit ein intuitives Verständnis dieser Assistenz zu entwickeln, ohne vorher über die Funktionalität unterrichtet worden zu sein. Sie zeigten zudem ein erhöhtes Maß an Fahrsicherheit in kritischen Verkehrssituationen. Doch diese Studie wirft auch neue Fragen auf, beispielsweise, ob der Sicherheitsgewinn auf kontinuierliche Distanzkodierung zurückzuführen ist und ob ein Nutzen auch in weiteren Szenarien vorliegen würde, etwa bei Kreuzungen und weniger kritischem longitudinalen Verkehr. Um diesen Fragen nachzugehen, wurden Effekte eines erweiterten Prototypen mit spurunabhängiger Kollisionsprädiktion, sowie einer Option zur binären Kommunikation möglicher Kollisionsrichtungen in einer weiteren Fahrsimulatorstudie untersucht. Auch in dieser Studie bestätigen die subjektiven Bewertungen ein schnelles Verständnis der Signale und eine Wahrnehmung räumlicher und zeitlicher Signalkomponenten. Überraschenderweise berichteten Teilnehmer größtenteils auch nach der Nutzung einer binären Assistenzvariante, dass sie eine gefahrabhängige Variation in der Intensität von taktilen Stimuli wahrgenommen hätten. Die Teilnehmer fühlten sich mit beiden Varianten in der Fahraufgabe unterstützt, besonders in Situationen, die von ihnen als kritisch eingeschätzt wurden. Im Gegensatz zur ersten Studie hat sich diese gefühlte Unterstützung nur geringfügig in einer messbaren Sicherheitsveränderung widergespiegelt. Dieses Ergebnis deutet darauf hin, dass die Wahrnehmungsanforderungen der Szenarien mit geringer Kritikalität mit den vorhandenen Fahrerkapazitäten erfüllt werden konnten.
Doch was passiert, wenn diese Fähigkeiten eingeschränkt werden, beispielsweise durch schlechte Sichtbedingungen oder Situationen mit erhöhter Ambiguität? In einer dritten Fahrsimulatorstudie wurde das Assistenzsystem in speziell solchen Situationen eingesetzt, was zu substantiellen Sicherheitsvorteilen gegenüber unassistiertem Fahren geführt hat. Zusätzlich zu der vorher eingeführten Form wurde eine neue Variante des Prototyps untersucht, welche räumliche Unsicherheiten der Fahrzeugwahrnehmung in taktilen Signalen kodiert. Studienteilnehmer hatten keine Schwierigkeiten, diese zusätzliche Signaldimension zu verstehen und die Information zur Verbesserung der Fahrsicherheit zu nutzen. Obwohl sie inherent weniger informativ sind als räumlich präzise Signale, bewerteten die Teilnehmer die Signale, die die Unsicherheit übermitteln, als ebenso nützlich und zufriedenstellend. Solch eine Wertschätzung für die Transparenz variabler Informationsreliabilität ist ein vielversprechendes Indiz für die Möglichkeit einer adaptiven Vertrauenskalibrierung in der Mensch-Maschine Interaktion. Dies ist ein Schritt hin zur einer engeren Integration der Fähigkeiten von Fahrer und Fahrzeug.
Ein komplementärer Schritt wäre eine Erweiterung der Transparenz mentaler Zustände des Fahrers, wodurch eine wechselseitige Anpassung von Mensch und Maschine möglich wäre.
Der letzte Teil dieser Arbeit diskutiert, wie diese Transparenz und weitere Voraussetzungen von Mensch-Maschine Kooperation erfüllt werden könnten, indem etwa Korrelate mentaler Zustände, insbesondere über das Blickverhalten, überwacht werden. Des Weiteren ergeben sich mit Blick auf zusätzliche kooperative Fähigkeiten neue Fragen über die Definition von Identität, sowie über die praktischen Konsequenzen von Mensch-Maschine Systemen, in denen ko-adaptive Agenten sensomotorische Prozesse vermittels einander ausüben können
Safety check in critical safety scenario for self-driving vehicles
En un Mercado emergente como es el de los coches autonómos una de las funciones esenciales es asegurar la seguridad del funcionamiento de dichos sistemas. La mayoría de los comportamientos del estado del arte son capaces de manejarse en un escenario sin anomalías. Sin embargo, las dinámicas del entorno, tales como las condiciones metereológicas o las oclusiones de los sensores, pueden comprometer el funcionamiento de estos. Para ampliar los escenarios en los cuales estos sistemas son capaces de funcionar, es necesario incluir nuevas funciones de seguirdad para una conducción segura en cualquier entorno. Esta contribución demuestra una validación para vehículos autónomos basada en las condiciones del entorno. Se propone una comprobación de los obstaculos y limitaciones de los sensores. Para ellos se define una Region de Interes (RoI). Combinando ambos conceptos se obtiene un valor cuantitativo del conocimiento de los entornos del sistema. La idea propuesta se basa en modificar el plan de actuación según dicho valor, mejorando el tiempo de reacción ante situaciones imprevistas. Los resultados de la simulación e implementación física en el coche autónomo muestran una mejora en los tiempos de reacción ante situaciones fuera del dominio operacional designado. Se considera que este proyecto resuelve una de las condiciones obligatorias para conseguir un coche autónomo con un nivel de automatización de nivel cuatro.Fully autonomous vehicles must guarantee safety. Most of state of the art behaviors can drive safely on scenarios with no anomalies. However, Dynamics, such as weather conditions or occlusions, on the operational design domain might comprise the security. For further automation we need to enlarge the workbench for the technology allowing to work safely even on those situations. We contribute with a safety validation for AV based on the conditions of the scenario. We propose a check for sensor visibility and limitations. Additionally we create a definition of a Region of Interest (RoI). Merging both data we obtain a quantitative value for environment awareness. The proposed idea is to, based on that value, modify the acting plan, improving reaction time for unforeseen. The results from simulation shows that using the proposed idea, dangerous situations can be avoided. Henceforth, the fulfillment of the derived safety assessment validation can guarantee safety of the AV. The proposed idea is to, based on that validation, modify the acting plan, improving reaction time for unforeseen and endowing the autonomous vehicle of a safety check. This update is mandatory for self driving vehicles that long to achieve a level 4 automation, as the human is no longer the responsible for safety check in unpredictable situations.Universidad de Sevilla. Máster en Ingeniería Electrónica, Robótica y Automátic
Mobile Robots Navigation
Mobile robots navigation includes different interrelated activities: (i) perception, as obtaining and interpreting sensory information; (ii) exploration, as the strategy that guides the robot to select the next direction to go; (iii) mapping, involving the construction of a spatial representation by using the sensory information perceived; (iv) localization, as the strategy to estimate the robot position within the spatial map; (v) path planning, as the strategy to find a path towards a goal location being optimal or not; and (vi) path execution, where motor actions are determined and adapted to environmental changes. The book addresses those activities by integrating results from the research work of several authors all over the world. Research cases are documented in 32 chapters organized within 7 categories next described
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