4,648 research outputs found
Inverse Optimal Planning for Air Traffic Control
We envision a system that concisely describes the rules of air traffic
control, assists human operators and supports dense autonomous air traffic
around commercial airports. We develop a method to learn the rules of air
traffic control from real data as a cost function via maximum entropy inverse
reinforcement learning. This cost function is used as a penalty for a
search-based motion planning method that discretizes both the control and the
state space. We illustrate the methodology by showing that our approach can
learn to imitate the airport arrival routes and separation rules of dense
commercial air traffic. The resulting trajectories are shown to be safe,
feasible, and efficient
Vision-Based Lane-Changing Behavior Detection Using Deep Residual Neural Network
Accurate lane localization and lane change detection are crucial in advanced
driver assistance systems and autonomous driving systems for safer and more
efficient trajectory planning. Conventional localization devices such as Global
Positioning System only provide road-level resolution for car navigation, which
is incompetent to assist in lane-level decision making. The state of art
technique for lane localization is to use Light Detection and Ranging sensors
to correct the global localization error and achieve centimeter-level accuracy,
but the real-time implementation and popularization for LiDAR is still limited
by its computational burden and current cost. As a cost-effective alternative,
vision-based lane change detection has been highly regarded for affordable
autonomous vehicles to support lane-level localization. A deep learning-based
computer vision system is developed to detect the lane change behavior using
the images captured by a front-view camera mounted on the vehicle and data from
the inertial measurement unit for highway driving. Testing results on
real-world driving data have shown that the proposed method is robust with
real-time working ability and could achieve around 87% lane change detection
accuracy. Compared to the average human reaction to visual stimuli, the
proposed computer vision system works 9 times faster, which makes it capable of
helping make life-saving decisions in time
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