16 research outputs found

    How to Stop Disagreeing and Start Cooperatingin the Presence of Asymmetric Packet Loss

    Get PDF
    We consider the design of a disagreement correction protocol in multi-vehicle systems. Vehicles broadcast in real-time vital information such as position, direction, speed, acceleration, intention, etc. This information is then used to identify the risks and adapt their trajectory to maintain the highest performance without compromising the safety. To minimize the risk due to the use of inconsistent information, all cooperating vehicles must agree whether to use the exchanged information to operate in a cooperative mode or use the only local information to operate in an autonomous mode. However, since wireless communications are prone to failures, it is impossible to deterministically reach an agreement. Therefore, any protocol will exhibit necessary disagreement periods. In this paper, we investigate whether vehicles can still cooperate despite communication failures even in the scenario where communication is suddenly not available. We present a deterministic protocol that allows all participants to either operate a cooperative mode when vehicles can exchange all the information in a timely manner or operate in autonomous mode when messages are lost. We show formally that the disagreement time is bounded by the time that the communication channel requires to deliver messages and validate our protocol using NS-3 simulations. We explain how the proposed solution can be used in vehicular platooning to attain high performance and still guarantee high safety standards despite communication failures

    Interim research assessment 2003-2005 - Computer Science

    Get PDF
    This report primarily serves as a source of information for the 2007 Interim Research Assessment Committee for Computer Science at the three technical universities in the Netherlands. The report also provides information for others interested in our research activities

    NASA thesaurus. Volume 2: Access vocabulary

    Get PDF
    The access vocabulary, which is essentially a permuted index, provides access to any word or number in authorized postable and nonpostable terms. Additional entries include postable and nonpostable terms, other word entries and pseudo-multiword terms that are permutations of words that contain words within words. The access vocabulary contains almost 42,000 entries that give increased access to the hierarchies in Volume 1 - Hierarchical Listing

    NASA Thesaurus. Volume 1: Hierarchical listing

    Get PDF
    There are 16,713 postable terms and 3,716 nonpostable terms approved for use in the NASA scientific and technical information system in the Hierarchical Listing of the NASA Thesaurus. The generic structure is presented for many terms. The broader term and narrower term relationships are shown in an indented fashion that illustrates the generic structure better than the more widely used BT and NT listings. Related terms are generously applied, thus enhancing the usefulness of the Hierarchical Listing. Greater access to the Hierarchical Listing may be achieved with the collateral use of Volume 2 - Access Vocabulary

    Vehicular coordination via a safety kernel in the gulliver test-bed

    No full text
    Cooperative vehicular systems base their coordination on inherently uncertain inter-vehicle communications. Safe solutions that do not properly manage uncertainty, lead to inefficient outcomes. We consider that cooperative functions can be executed with several service levels, and we use the system architectural concept of safety kernel for managing the service level that achieves the best possible performance while keeping the system safe. We use the Gulliver test-bed for demonstrating the safety kernel concept by means of a pilot system implementation on scaled vehicles with sensors and communication capabilities. The demonstrated architecture incorporates: (1) a local dynamic map (LDM) that uses local and remote sensory information for calculating the location of nearby objects, (2) a safety kernel to manage the service levels, (3) a cooperative level of service evaluator that allows vehicles to reach agreement on a common service level and, finally, (4) a driver manager that executes in accordance to the cooperative level of service when determining how to calculate the trajectory. This paper explains how the different components considered in the architectural concept operate, and shows how it is possible to use (similar to existing) trajectory planning algorithms when implementing the concept

    NASA thesaurus. Volume 1: Hierarchical Listing

    Get PDF
    There are over 17,000 postable terms and nearly 4,000 nonpostable terms approved for use in the NASA scientific and technical information system in the Hierarchical Listing of the NASA Thesaurus. The generic structure is presented for many terms. The broader term and narrower term relationships are shown in an indented fashion that illustrates the generic structure better than the more widely used BT and NT listings. Related terms are generously applied, thus enhancing the usefulness of the Hierarchical Listing. Greater access to the Hierarchical Listing may be achieved with the collateral use of Volume 2 - Access Vocabulary and Volume 3 - Definitions
    corecore