2,142 research outputs found
Pedestrian behavior prediction based on motion patterns for vehicle-to-pedestrian collision avoidance
This paper proposes a prediction method for vehicle-to-pedestrian collision avoidance, which learns and then predicts pedestrian behaviors as their motion instances are being observed. During learning, known trajectories are clustered to form Motion Patterns (MP), which become knowledge a priori to a multi-level prediction model that predicts long-term or short-term pedestrian behaviors. Simulation results show that it works well in a complex structured environment and the prediction is consistent with actual behaviors. © 2008 IEEE.published_or_final_versio
Human Motion Trajectory Prediction: A Survey
With growing numbers of intelligent autonomous systems in human environments,
the ability of such systems to perceive, understand and anticipate human
behavior becomes increasingly important. Specifically, predicting future
positions of dynamic agents and planning considering such predictions are key
tasks for self-driving vehicles, service robots and advanced surveillance
systems. This paper provides a survey of human motion trajectory prediction. We
review, analyze and structure a large selection of work from different
communities and propose a taxonomy that categorizes existing methods based on
the motion modeling approach and level of contextual information used. We
provide an overview of the existing datasets and performance metrics. We
discuss limitations of the state of the art and outline directions for further
research.Comment: Submitted to the International Journal of Robotics Research (IJRR),
37 page
Real-Time Predictive Modeling and Robust Avoidance of Pedestrians with Uncertain, Changing Intentions
To plan safe trajectories in urban environments, autonomous vehicles must be
able to quickly assess the future intentions of dynamic agents. Pedestrians are
particularly challenging to model, as their motion patterns are often uncertain
and/or unknown a priori. This paper presents a novel changepoint detection and
clustering algorithm that, when coupled with offline unsupervised learning of a
Gaussian process mixture model (DPGP), enables quick detection of changes in
intent and online learning of motion patterns not seen in prior training data.
The resulting long-term movement predictions demonstrate improved accuracy
relative to offline learning alone, in terms of both intent and trajectory
prediction. By embedding these predictions within a chance-constrained motion
planner, trajectories which are probabilistically safe to pedestrian motions
can be identified in real-time. Hardware experiments demonstrate that this
approach can accurately predict pedestrian motion patterns from onboard
sensor/perception data and facilitate robust navigation within a dynamic
environment.Comment: Submitted to 2014 International Workshop on the Algorithmic
Foundations of Robotic
AutonoVi: Autonomous Vehicle Planning with Dynamic Maneuvers and Traffic Constraints
We present AutonoVi:, a novel algorithm for autonomous vehicle navigation
that supports dynamic maneuvers and satisfies traffic constraints and norms.
Our approach is based on optimization-based maneuver planning that supports
dynamic lane-changes, swerving, and braking in all traffic scenarios and guides
the vehicle to its goal position. We take into account various traffic
constraints, including collision avoidance with other vehicles, pedestrians,
and cyclists using control velocity obstacles. We use a data-driven approach to
model the vehicle dynamics for control and collision avoidance. Furthermore,
our trajectory computation algorithm takes into account traffic rules and
behaviors, such as stopping at intersections and stoplights, based on an
arc-spline representation. We have evaluated our algorithm in a simulated
environment and tested its interactive performance in urban and highway driving
scenarios with tens of vehicles, pedestrians, and cyclists. These scenarios
include jaywalking pedestrians, sudden stops from high speeds, safely passing
cyclists, a vehicle suddenly swerving into the roadway, and high-density
traffic where the vehicle must change lanes to progress more effectively.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figure
Socially Aware Motion Planning with Deep Reinforcement Learning
For robotic vehicles to navigate safely and efficiently in pedestrian-rich
environments, it is important to model subtle human behaviors and navigation
rules (e.g., passing on the right). However, while instinctive to humans,
socially compliant navigation is still difficult to quantify due to the
stochasticity in people's behaviors. Existing works are mostly focused on using
feature-matching techniques to describe and imitate human paths, but often do
not generalize well since the feature values can vary from person to person,
and even run to run. This work notes that while it is challenging to directly
specify the details of what to do (precise mechanisms of human navigation), it
is straightforward to specify what not to do (violations of social norms).
Specifically, using deep reinforcement learning, this work develops a
time-efficient navigation policy that respects common social norms. The
proposed method is shown to enable fully autonomous navigation of a robotic
vehicle moving at human walking speed in an environment with many pedestrians.Comment: 8 page
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
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