9,573 research outputs found
An Assessment on the Use of Stationary Vehicles as a Support to Cooperative Positioning
In this paper, we consider the use of stationary vehicles as tools to enhance
the localisation capabilities of moving vehicles in a VANET. We examine the
idea in terms of its potential benefits, technical requirements, algorithmic
design and experimental evaluation. Simulation results are given to illustrate
the efficacy of the technique.Comment: This version of the paper is an updated version of the initial
submission, where some initial comments of reviewers have been taken into
accoun
Heterogeneous V2V Communications in Multi-Link and Multi-RAT Vehicular Networks
Connected and automated vehicles will enable advanced traffic safety and
efficiency applications thanks to the dynamic exchange of information between
vehicles, and between vehicles and infrastructure nodes. Connected vehicles can
utilize IEEE 802.11p for vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure
(V2I) communications. However, a widespread deployment of connected vehicles
and the introduction of connected automated driving applications will notably
increase the bandwidth and scalability requirements of vehicular networks. This
paper proposes to address these challenges through the adoption of
heterogeneous V2V communications in multi-link and multi-RAT vehicular
networks. In particular, the paper proposes the first distributed (and
decentralized) context-aware heterogeneous V2V communications algorithm that is
technology and application agnostic, and that allows each vehicle to
autonomously and dynamically select its communications technology taking into
account its application requirements and the communication context conditions.
This study demonstrates the potential of heterogeneous V2V communications, and
the capability of the proposed algorithm to satisfy the vehicles' application
requirements while approaching the estimated upper bound network capacity
iTETRIS: An Integrated Wireless and Traffic Platform for Real-Time Road Traffic Management Solutions
Wireless vehicular cooperative systems have been identified as an attractive solution to improve road traffic management, thereby contributing to the European goal of safer, cleaner, and more efficient and sustainable traffic solutions. V2V-V2I communication technologies can improve traffic management through real-time exchange of data among vehicles and with road infrastructure. It is also of great importance to investigate the adequate combination of V2V and V2I technologies to ensure the continuous and costefficient operation of traffic management solutions based on wireless vehicular cooperative solutions. However, to adequately design and optimize these communication protocols and analyze the potential of wireless vehicular cooperative systems to improve road traffic management, adequate testbeds and field operational tests need to be conducted.
Despite the potential of Field Operational Tests to get the first insights into the benefits and problems faced in the development of wireless vehicular cooperative systems, there is yet the need to evaluate in the long term and large dimension the true potential benefits of wireless vehicular cooperative systems to improve traffic efficiency. To this aim, iTETRIS is devoted to the development of advanced tools coupling traffic and wireless communication simulators
Implicit Cooperative Positioning in Vehicular Networks
Absolute positioning of vehicles is based on Global Navigation Satellite
Systems (GNSS) combined with on-board sensors and high-resolution maps. In
Cooperative Intelligent Transportation Systems (C-ITS), the positioning
performance can be augmented by means of vehicular networks that enable
vehicles to share location-related information. This paper presents an Implicit
Cooperative Positioning (ICP) algorithm that exploits the Vehicle-to-Vehicle
(V2V) connectivity in an innovative manner, avoiding the use of explicit V2V
measurements such as ranging. In the ICP approach, vehicles jointly localize
non-cooperative physical features (such as people, traffic lights or inactive
cars) in the surrounding areas, and use them as common noisy reference points
to refine their location estimates. Information on sensed features are fused
through V2V links by a consensus procedure, nested within a message passing
algorithm, to enhance the vehicle localization accuracy. As positioning does
not rely on explicit ranging information between vehicles, the proposed ICP
method is amenable to implementation with off-the-shelf vehicular communication
hardware. The localization algorithm is validated in different traffic
scenarios, including a crossroad area with heterogeneous conditions in terms of
feature density and V2V connectivity, as well as a real urban area by using
Simulation of Urban MObility (SUMO) for traffic data generation. Performance
results show that the proposed ICP method can significantly improve the vehicle
location accuracy compared to the stand-alone GNSS, especially in harsh
environments, such as in urban canyons, where the GNSS signal is highly
degraded or denied.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, in review, 201
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