Motion Planning for Passenger Vehicles - Force Field Trajectory Optimization for Automated Driving

Author(s):  
T. Hesse ◽  
D. Hess ◽  
T. Sattel
2021 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mysore Narasimhamurthy Sharath ◽  
Babak Mehran

The article presents a review of recent literature on the performance metrics of Automated Driving Systems (ADS). More specifically, performance indicators of environment perception and motion planning modules are reviewed as they are the most complicated ADS modules. The need for the incorporation of the level of threat an obstacle poses in the performance metrics is described. A methodology to quantify the level of threat of an obstacle is presented in this regard. The approach involves simultaneously considering multiple stimulus parameters (that elicit responses from drivers), thereby not ignoring multivariate interactions. Human-likeness of ADS is a desirable characteristic as ADS share road infrastructure with humans. The described method can be used to develop human-like perception and motion planning modules of ADS. In this regard, performance metrics capable of quantifying human-likeness of ADS are also presented. A comparison of different performance metrics is then summarized. ADS operators have an obligation to report any incident (crash/disengagement) to safety regulating authorities. However, precrash events/states are not being reported. The need for the collection of the precrash scenario is described. A desirable modification to the data reporting/collecting is suggested as a framework. The framework describes the precrash sequences to be reported along with the possible ways of utilizing such a valuable dataset (by the safety regulating authorities) to comprehensively assess (and consequently improve) the safety of ADS. The framework proposes to collect and maintain a repository of precrash sequences. Such a repository can be used to 1) comprehensively learn and model the precrash scenarios, 2) learn the characteristics of precrash scenarios and eventually anticipate them, 3) assess the appropriateness of the different performance metrics in precrash scenarios, 4) synthesize a diverse dataset of precrash scenarios, 5) identify the ideal configuration of sensors and algorithms to enhance safety, and 6) monitor the performance of perception and motion planning modules.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 474-480 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keisuke Yoneda ◽  
Toshiki Iida ◽  
TaeHyon Kim ◽  
Ryo Yanase ◽  
Mohammad Aldibaja ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daofei Li ◽  
Zhaohan Hu

Motion planning in dynamic environment is crucial to the automated driving safety. In extremely emergency scenarios with unavoidable collisions, especially those with complex impact patterns, the potential crash risk should be well considered in motion planning. This paper proposes a motion planning algorithm for unavoidable collisions, which directly embeds a generalized crash severity index model to vehicle-to-vehicle collisions of multiple impact patterns. Firstly, the clothoid curve is used to sample the vehicle trajectory before collision, and a two-degree-of-freedom model is adopted to predict the vehicle poses corresponding to each sample path. Then, the crash severity index model is to estimate the potential crash severity of all sample paths. To improve the inferring time efficiency, a neural network is constructed and deployed to approximate the nonlinear severity model. Finally, the crash-severity-optimal trajectory is tracked through model predictive control method. Results show that by combining the braking and steering interventions for better crash severity reduction, the proposed strategy can achieve better mitigation effects than commonly-used collision-avoidance strategies. The deployment of real car experiment and sensitivity analysis demonstrate that the planning algorithm can guarantee real-time and reliably safe performances.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yizhou Liu ◽  
Fusheng Zha ◽  
Mantian Li ◽  
Wei Guo ◽  
Yunxin Jia ◽  
...  

Many algorithms in probabilistic sampling-based motion planning have been proposed to create a path for a robot in an environment with obstacles. Due to the randomness of sampling, they can efficiently compute the collision-free paths made of segments lying in the configuration space with probabilistic completeness. However, this property also makes the trajectories have some unnecessary redundant or jerky motions, which need to be optimized. For most robotics applications, the trajectories should be short, smooth and keep away from obstacles. This paper proposes a new trajectory optimization technique which transforms a polygon collision-free path into a smooth path, and can deal with trajectories which contain various task constraints. The technique removes redundant motions by quadratic programming in the parameter space of trajectory, and converts collision avoidance conditions to linear constraints to ensure absolute safety of trajectories. Furthermore, the technique uses a projection operator to realize the optimization of trajectories which are subject to some hard kinematic constraints, like keeping a glass of water upright or coordinating operation with dual robots. The experimental results proved the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed method, when it is compared with other trajectory optimization methods.


2022 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luke Drnach ◽  
John Z. Zhang ◽  
Ye Zhao

As robots move from the laboratory into the real world, motion planning will need to account for model uncertainty and risk. For robot motions involving intermittent contact, planning for uncertainty in contact is especially important, as failure to successfully make and maintain contact can be catastrophic. Here, we model uncertainty in terrain geometry and friction characteristics, and combine a risk-sensitive objective with chance constraints to provide a trade-off between robustness to uncertainty and constraint satisfaction with an arbitrarily high feasibility guarantee. We evaluate our approach in two simple examples: a push-block system for benchmarking and a single-legged hopper. We demonstrate that chance constraints alone produce trajectories similar to those produced using strict complementarity constraints; however, when equipped with a robust objective, we show the chance constraints can mediate a trade-off between robustness to uncertainty and strict constraint satisfaction. Thus, our study may represent an important step towards reasoning about contact uncertainty in motion planning.


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