6 research outputs found

    Message dissemination scheduling for multiple cooperative drivings

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    With the advances of control and vehicular communication technologies, a group of connected and autonomous (CA) vehicles can drive cooperatively to form a so-called cooperative driving pattern, which has been verified to significantly improve road safety, traffic efficiency and the environmental sustainability. A more general scenario that various types of cooperative driving, such as vehicle platooning and traffic monitoring, coexist on roads will appear soon. To support such multiple cooperative drivings, it is critical to design an efficient scheduling algorithm for periodical message dissemination, i.e. beacon, in a shared communication channel, which has not been fully addressed before. In this paper, we consider multiple cooperative drivings in a bidirectional road, and propose both the decentralized and the RSU-assisted centralized beacon scheduling algorithms which aim at guaranteeing reliable delivery of beacon messages for cooperative drivings as well as maximizing the channel utilization. Numerical results confirm the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms

    A survey on vehicular communication for cooperative truck platooning application

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    Platooning is an application where a group of vehicles move one after each other in close proximity, acting jointly as a single physical system. The scope of platooning is to improve safety, reduce fuel consumption, and increase road use efficiency. Even if conceived several decades ago as a concept, based on the new progress in automation and vehicular networking platooning has attracted particular attention in the latest years and is expected to become of common implementation in the next future, at least for trucks.The platoon system is the result of a combination of multiple disciplines, from transportation, to automation, to electronics, to telecommunications. In this survey, we consider the platooning, and more specifically the platooning of trucks, from the point of view of wireless communications. Wireless communications are indeed a key element, since they allow the information to propagate within the convoy with an almost negligible delay and really making all vehicles acting as one. Scope of this paper is to present a comprehensive survey on connected vehicles for the platooning application, starting with an overview of the projects that are driving the development of this technology, followed by a brief overview of the current and upcoming vehicular networking architecture and standards, by a review of the main open issues related to wireless communications applied to platooning, and a discussion of security threats and privacy concerns. The survey will conclude with a discussion of the main areas that we consider still open and that can drive future research directions.(c) 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

    Towards efficacy and efficiency in sparse delay tolerant networks

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    The ubiquitous adoption of portable smart devices has enabled a new way of communication via Delay Tolerant Networks (DTNs), whereby messages are routed by the personal devices carried by ever-moving people. Although a DTN is a type of Mobile Ad Hoc Network (MANET), traditional MANET solutions are ill-equipped to accommodate message delivery in DTNs due to the dynamic and unpredictable nature of people\u27s movements and their spatio-temporal sparsity. More so, such DTNs are susceptible to catastrophic congestion and are inherently chaotic and arduous. This manuscript proposes approaches to handle message delivery in notably sparse DTNs. First, the ChitChat system [69] employs the social interests of individuals participating in a DTN to accurately model multi-hop relationships and to make opportunistic routing decisions for interest-annotated messages. Second, the ChitChat system is hybridized [70] to consider both social context and geographic information for learning the social semantics of locations so as to identify worthwhile routing opportunities to destinations and areas of interest. Network density analyses of five real-world datasets is conducted to identify sparse datasets on which to conduct simulations, finding that commonly-used datasets in past DTN research are notably dense and well connected, and suggests two rarely used datasets are appropriate for research into sparse DTNs. Finally, the Catora system is proposed to address congestive-driven degradation of service in DTNs by accomplishing two simultaneous tasks: (i) expedite the delivery of higher quality messages by uniquely ordering messages for transfer and delivery, and (ii) avoid congestion through strategic buffer management and message removal. Through dataset-driven simulations, these systems are found to outperform the state-of-the-art, with ChitChat facilitating delivery in sparse DTNs and Catora unencumbered by congestive conditions --Abstract, page iv

    Towards reliable message dissemination for multiple cooperative drivings: a hybrid approach

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    A group of connected and autonomous vehicles (CAVs) with common interests can drive in a cooperative manner, namely cooperative driving, which has been verified to significantly improve road safety, traffic efficiency and environmental sustainability. A more general scenario that various types of cooperative driving applications such as truck platooning and vehicle clustering, will coexist on roads in the foreseeable future. To support such multiple cooperative drivings, it is critical to design an efficient message dissemination scheduling in a shared communication channel. Most ongoing research suggests using the time-division multiple access (TDMA) method on top of IEEE 802.11p as a potential remedy. However, TDMA requires time synchronization and is not flexible, especially in the multiple cooperative drivings scenario where the beacon frequency needs to be updated and the number of cooperative drivings changes to meet the time-varying traffic conditions. In this paper, we focus on the study of the message dissemination protocol for platooning, a typical and well-known cooperative driving pattern. Specifically, we proposed a hybrid message dissemination protocol which aims at guaranteeing the reliable delivery of beacon messages for a multi-platooning system. We first adopt a TDMA-based medium access method for intra-platoon communication to improve the reliability and efficiency of beacon dissemination. We then present a token-passing medium access method for inter-platoon communication, which maps platoons into a token ring to schedule their beacon transmission time. We conduct extensive numerical experiments to validate the effectiveness of our protocol

    MS FT-2-2 7 Orthogonal polynomials and quadrature: Theory, computation, and applications

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    Quadrature rules find many applications in science and engineering. Their analysis is a classical area of applied mathematics and continues to attract considerable attention. This seminar brings together speakers with expertise in a large variety of quadrature rules. It is the aim of the seminar to provide an overview of recent developments in the analysis of quadrature rules. The computation of error estimates and novel applications also are described

    Generalized averaged Gaussian quadrature and applications

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    A simple numerical method for constructing the optimal generalized averaged Gaussian quadrature formulas will be presented. These formulas exist in many cases in which real positive GaussKronrod formulas do not exist, and can be used as an adequate alternative in order to estimate the error of a Gaussian rule. We also investigate the conditions under which the optimal averaged Gaussian quadrature formulas and their truncated variants are internal
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