Collision Probability in an In-Line Machines Model

Author(s):  
Eishi Chiba ◽  
Tetsuo Asano ◽  
Takeshi Miura ◽  
Naoki Katoh ◽  
Ikuo Mitsuka
Author(s):  
Fumiya MURASE ◽  
Naruta TERAMOTO ◽  
Atsushi TOYODA ◽  
Yoshihito TANAKA ◽  
Taro ARIKAWA

Author(s):  
Mingcong Cao ◽  
Chuan Hu ◽  
Rongrong Wang ◽  
Jinxiang Wang ◽  
Nan Chen

This paper investigates the trajectory tracking control of independently actuated autonomous vehicles after the first impact, aiming to mitigate the secondary collision probability. An integrated predictive control strategy is proposed to mitigate the deteriorated state propagation and facilitate safety objective achievement in critical conditions after a collision. Three highlights can be concluded in this work: (1) A compensatory model predictive control (MPC) strategy is proposed to incorporate a feedforward-feedback compensation control (FCC) method. Based on the definite physical analysis, it is verified that adequate reverse steering and differential torque vectoring render more potentials and flexibility for vehicle post-impact control; (2) With compensatory portions, the deteriorated states after a collision are far beyond the traditional stability envelope. Hence it can be further manipulated in MPC by constraint transformation, rather than introducing soft constraints and decreasing the control efforts on tracking error; (3) Considering time-varying saturation on input, input rate, and slip ratio, the proposed FCC-MPC controller is developed to improve faster deviation attenuation both in lateral and yaw motions. Finally two high-fidelity simulation cases implemented on CarSim-Simulink conjoint platform have demonstrated that the proposed controller has the advanced capabilities of vehicle safety improvement and better control performance achievement after severe impacts.


2009 ◽  
Vol 03 (02) ◽  
pp. 209-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
YI YU ◽  
KAZUKI JOE ◽  
VINCENT ORIA ◽  
FABIAN MOERCHEN ◽  
J. STEPHEN DOWNIE ◽  
...  

Research on audio-based music retrieval has primarily concentrated on refining audio features to improve search quality. However, much less work has been done on improving the time efficiency of music audio searches. Representing music audio documents in an indexable format provides a mechanism for achieving efficiency. To address this issue, in this work Exact Locality Sensitive Mapping (ELSM) is suggested to join the concatenated feature sets and soft hash values. On this basis we propose audio-based music indexing techniques, ELSM and Soft Locality Sensitive Hash (SoftLSH) using an optimized Feature Union (FU) set of extracted audio features. Two contributions are made here. First, the principle of similarity-invariance is applied in summarizing audio feature sequences and utilized in training semantic audio representations based on regression. Second, soft hash values are pre-calculated to help locate the searching range more accurately and improve collision probability among features similar to each other. Our algorithms are implemented in a demonstration system to show how to retrieve and evaluate multi-version audio documents. Experimental evaluation over a real "multi-version" audio dataset confirms the practicality of ELSM and SoftLSH with FU and proves that our algorithms are effective for both multi-version detection (online query, one-query vs. multi-object) and same content detection (batch queries, multi-queries vs. one-object).


2022 ◽  
Vol 245 ◽  
pp. 110583
Author(s):  
Honglu Gu ◽  
Haiyan Guo ◽  
Fengtao Bai ◽  
Xiaomin Li ◽  
Fuheng Li

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