27,925 research outputs found
A decision support methodology to enhance the competitiveness of the Turkish automotive industry
This is the post-print (final draft post-refereeing) version of the article. Copyright @ 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.Three levels of competitiveness affect the success of business enterprises in a globally competitive environment: the competitiveness of the company, the competitiveness of the industry in which the company operates and the competitiveness of the country where the business is located. This study analyses the competitiveness of the automotive industry in association with the national competitiveness perspective using a methodology based on Bayesian Causal Networks. First, we structure the competitiveness problem of the automotive industry through a synthesis of expert knowledge in the light of the World Economic Forum’s competitiveness indicators. Second, we model the relationships among the variables identified in the problem structuring stage and analyse these relationships using a Bayesian Causal Network. Third, we develop policy suggestions under various scenarios to enhance the national competitive advantages of the automotive industry. We present an analysis of the Turkish automotive industry as a case study. It is possible to generalise the policy suggestions developed for the case of Turkish automotive industry to the automotive industries in other developing countries where country and industry competitiveness levels are similar to those of Turkey
Practical classification of different moving targets using automotive radar and deep neural networks
In this work, the authors present results for classification of different classes of targets (car, single and multiple people, bicycle) using automotive radar data and different neural networks. A fast implementation of radar algorithms for detection, tracking, and micro-Doppler extraction is proposed in conjunction with the automotive radar transceiver TEF810X and microcontroller unit SR32R274 manufactured by NXP Semiconductors. Three different types of neural networks are considered, namely a classic convolutional network, a residual network, and a combination of convolutional and recurrent network, for different classification problems across the four classes of targets recorded. Considerable accuracy (close to 100% in some cases) and low latency of the radar pre-processing prior to classification (∼0.55 s to produce a 0.5 s long spectrogram) are demonstrated in this study, and possible shortcomings and outstanding issues are discussed
Enhanced Industrial Machinery Condition Monitoring Methodology based on Novelty Detection and Multi-Modal Analysis
This paper presents a condition-based monitoring methodology based on novelty detection applied to industrial machinery. The proposed approach includes both, the classical classification of multiple a priori known scenarios, and the innovative detection capability of new operating modes not previously available. The development of condition-based monitoring methodologies considering the isolation capabilities of unexpected scenarios represents, nowadays, a trending topic able to answer the demanding requirements of the future industrial processes monitoring systems. First, the method is based on the temporal segmentation of the available physical magnitudes, and the estimation of a set of time-based statistical features. Then, a double feature reduction stage based on Principal Component Analysis and Linear Discriminant Analysis is applied in order to optimize the classification and novelty detection performances. The posterior combination of a Feed-forward Neural Network and One-Class Support Vector Machine allows the proper interpretation of known and unknown operating conditions. The effectiveness of this novel condition monitoring scheme has been verified by experimental results obtained from an automotive industry machine.Postprint (published version
A comparative analysis of decision trees vis-a-vis other computational data mining techniques in automotive insurance fraud detection
The development and application of computational data mining techniques in financial fraud detection and business failure prediction has become a popular cross-disciplinary research area in recent times involving financial economists, forensic accountants and computational modellers. Some of the computational techniques popularly used in the context of - financial fraud detection and business failure prediction can also be effectively applied in the detection of fraudulent insurance claims and therefore, can be of immense practical value to the insurance industry. We provide a comparative analysis of prediction performance of a battery of data mining techniques using real-life automotive insurance fraud data. While the data we have used in our paper is US-based, the computational techniques we have tested can be adapted and generally applied to detect similar insurance frauds in other countries as well where an organized automotive insurance industry exists
Implementation and Evaluation of a Cooperative Vehicle-to-Pedestrian Safety Application
While the development of Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) safety applications based
on Dedicated Short-Range Communications (DSRC) has been extensively undergoing
standardization for more than a decade, such applications are extremely missing
for Vulnerable Road Users (VRUs). Nonexistence of collaborative systems between
VRUs and vehicles was the main reason for this lack of attention. Recent
developments in Wi-Fi Direct and DSRC-enabled smartphones are changing this
perspective. Leveraging the existing V2V platforms, we propose a new framework
using a DSRC-enabled smartphone to extend safety benefits to VRUs. The
interoperability of applications between vehicles and portable DSRC enabled
devices is achieved through the SAE J2735 Personal Safety Message (PSM).
However, considering the fact that VRU movement dynamics, response times, and
crash scenarios are fundamentally different from vehicles, a specific framework
should be designed for VRU safety applications to study their performance. In
this article, we first propose an end-to-end Vehicle-to-Pedestrian (V2P)
framework to provide situational awareness and hazard detection based on the
most common and injury-prone crash scenarios. The details of our VRU safety
module, including target classification and collision detection algorithms, are
explained next. Furthermore, we propose and evaluate a mitigating solution for
congestion and power consumption issues in such systems. Finally, the whole
system is implemented and analyzed for realistic crash scenarios
Parallel Multi-Hypothesis Algorithm for Criticality Estimation in Traffic and Collision Avoidance
Due to the current developments towards autonomous driving and vehicle active
safety, there is an increasing necessity for algorithms that are able to
perform complex criticality predictions in real-time. Being able to process
multi-object traffic scenarios aids the implementation of a variety of
automotive applications such as driver assistance systems for collision
prevention and mitigation as well as fall-back systems for autonomous vehicles.
We present a fully model-based algorithm with a parallelizable architecture.
The proposed algorithm can evaluate the criticality of complex, multi-modal
(vehicles and pedestrians) traffic scenarios by simulating millions of
trajectory combinations and detecting collisions between objects. The algorithm
is able to estimate upcoming criticality at very early stages, demonstrating
its potential for vehicle safety-systems and autonomous driving applications.
An implementation on an embedded system in a test vehicle proves in a
prototypical manner the compatibility of the algorithm with the hardware
possibilities of modern cars. For a complex traffic scenario with 11 dynamic
objects, more than 86 million pose combinations are evaluated in 21 ms on the
GPU of a Drive PX~2
Radar-based Road User Classification and Novelty Detection with Recurrent Neural Network Ensembles
Radar-based road user classification is an important yet still challenging
task towards autonomous driving applications. The resolution of conventional
automotive radar sensors results in a sparse data representation which is tough
to recover by subsequent signal processing. In this article, classifier
ensembles originating from a one-vs-one binarization paradigm are enriched by
one-vs-all correction classifiers. They are utilized to efficiently classify
individual traffic participants and also identify hidden object classes which
have not been presented to the classifiers during training. For each classifier
of the ensemble an individual feature set is determined from a total set of 98
features. Thereby, the overall classification performance can be improved when
compared to previous methods and, additionally, novel classes can be identified
much more accurately. Furthermore, the proposed structure allows to give new
insights in the importance of features for the recognition of individual
classes which is crucial for the development of new algorithms and sensor
requirements.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures, accepted paper for 2019 IEEE Intelligent Vehicles
Symposium (IV), Paris, France, June 201
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