Tag Archives: automated vehicles

Cars may soon ‘see’ riders in blind corners

Princeton University is developing an automated radar system that will detect and alert drivers and riders of oncoming traffic and pedestrians around blind corners.

Professor Felix Heide,an  assistant professor of computer science at the uni, says the system has ramifications for the safety of motorcyclists.

“We have already tested bicyclists successfully, so motorcyclists and scooter riders will also be easy to detect by our system,” he says.

The system has been tested successfully in cars, but could also be used in motorcycles.

“It would certainly be suited to be installed on motorcycles as well,” he says.

BlindFelix Heide

The system could be useful fr detecting a gaggle of cyclists just up around that next blind corner on your Sunday morning ride!

It’s not the first system for detecting smaller and more vulnerable rad users such as riders fo bicycles, motorcycles and scooters.

Volvo has developed technology that alerts drivers of cyclists and Jaguar is working on technology that makes A pillars “invisible” so drivers can see smaller road users such as riders.

While we applaud such technology, my concern is that drivers will become reliant on such technology and look for riders even less.

There is also the concern that the tech will fail.

Radar for blind corners

In the Princeton study, researchers combined artificial intelligence and radar.

The system uses Doppler radar to bounce radio waves off surfaces such as buildings and parked vehicles.

The radar signal hits the surface at an angle, so its reflection rebounds off like a cue ball hitting the wall of a pool table. The signal goes on to strike objects hidden around the corner.

Some of the radar signal bounces back to detectors mounted on the car or motorcycle, allowing the system to see objects around the corner and tell whether they are moving or stationary.

“This will enable cars to see occluded objects that today’s lidar and camera sensors cannot record, for example, allowing a self-driving vehicle to see around a dangerous intersection,” says Felix.

“The radar sensors are also relatively low-cost, especially compared to lidar sensors, and scale to mass production.”

In a paper presented June 16 at this Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR), the researchers described how the system is able to distinguish objects including cars, bicyclists and pedestrians and gauge their direction and oncoming speed.

“The proposed approach allows for collision warning for pedestrians and cyclists in real-world autonomous driving scenarios — before seeing them with existing direct line-of-sight sensors,” the authors write.

In recent years, engineers have developed a variety of sensor systems that allow cars to detect other objects on the road. Many of them rely on lidar or cameras using visible or near-infrared light, and such sensors preventing collisions are now common on modern cars. But optical sensing is difficult to use to spot items out of the car’s line of sight. In earlier research, Felix’s team has used light to see objects hidden around corners. But those efforts currently are not practical for use in cars both because they require high-powered lasers and are restricted to short ranges.

Princeton University is developing an automated radar system that will detect and alert drivers and riders of oncoming traffic and pedestrians around blind corners.Car with radar and sensors

In conducting that earlier research, Felix and his colleagues wondered whether it would be possible to create a system to detect hazards out of the car’s line of sight using imaging radar instead of visible light. The signal loss at smooth surfaces is much lower for radar systems, and radar is a proven technology for tracking objects.

The challenge is that radar’s spatial resolution — used for picturing objects around corners such as cars and bikes — is relatively low. However, the researchers believed that they could create algorithms to interpret the radar data to allow the sensors to function.

“The algorithms that we developed are highly efficient and fit on current generation automotive hardware systems,” Felix says. “So, you might see this technology already in the next generation of vehicles.”

To allow the system to distinguish objects, Felix’s team processed part of the radar signal that standard radars consider background noise rather than usable information. The team applied artificial intelligence techniques to refine the processing and read the images.

Recognising small road users

Fangyin Wei, a graduate student in computer science and one of the paper’s lead authors, says the computer running the system had to learn to recognise cyclists and pedestrians from a very sparse amount of data.

“First we have to detect if something is there. If there is something there, is it important? Is it a cyclist or a pedestrian?” she says. “Then we have to locate it.”

Fangyin says the system currently detects pedestrians and cyclists because the engineers felt those were the most challenging objects because of their small size and varied shape and motion. She says the system could be adjusted to detect vehicles as well, which would include motorcycles and scooters.

The researchers plan to follow the research in a number of directions for applications involving both radar and refinements in signal processing.

The paper’s authors also include: Jürgen Dickmann, Florian Krause, Werner Ritter, and Nicolas Schiener of Mercedes-Benz AG; Buu Phan and Fahim Mannan of Algolux; Klaus Dietmayer of Ulm University; and Bernard Sick of the University of Kassel. Support for the research was provided in part by the European Union’s H2020 ECSEL program

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Future cars may listen for motorbikes

There may be no need for a loud exhaust so drivers can hear riders with future technology allowing cars to listen for vital noises as quiet as a nail puncturing a tyre.

Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Digital Media Technology (IDMT) in Oldenburg, Germany, have developed a prototype system capable of recognising important external noises.

The system could very well find its way into many modern cars to alert drivers to all sorts of other road users including motorcycles.

Even more importantly, it may be able to listen for the coming wave of near-silent electric motorcycles.

Listen to the trafficRide Vision road safety automated vehicle autonomous riderless dirverless

The European Association of Motorcycle Manufacturers report says much of the current automated technology is untested in the real world and questions its ability to detect motorcycles.

This new auditory technology is designed to fill in the gaps left by lidar sensors that fail to detect small objects such as motorcyclists, cyclists and pedestrians as well as stray livestock and wildlife.

Fraunhofer IDMT Acoustic Event Recognition group chief Danilo Hollosi says no autonomous vehicle has yet been equipped with a system capable of perceiving external noises.

“Such systems would be able to immediately recognise the siren of an approaching emergency vehicle, for example, so that the autonomous vehicle would then know to move over to one side of the highway and form an access lane for the rescue services,” Danilo says.

“There are numerous other scenarios in which an acoustic early-warning system can play a vital role – when an autonomous vehicle is turning into a pedestrian area or residential road where children are playing, for example, or for recognising defects or dangerous situations such as a nail in a tyre.”

“In addition, such systems could also be used to monitor the condition of the vehicle or even double as an emergency telephone equipped with voice-recognition technology.”

Artificial intelligenceFuture cars may listen for motorbikes

The Fraunhofer IDMT acoustic sensor system consists of microphones mounted on the outside of the car to listen to traffic, plus a control unit and software stored inside.

Their project uses artificial intelligence to recognise the acoustic signature of each relevant sound event.

This is done by machine-learning methods that use acoustic libraries compiled by Fraunhofer IDMT.

“Beamforming algorithms” enable the system to dynamically locate and identify moving sound sources.

The technology is expected to reach the market by the middle of the coming decade.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Will 5G networks make riding safer?

5G phone networks may make autonomous driving and vehicle sensors more sensitive and reliable, but will the faster networks also increase driver distractions?

A Spanish automotive company has demonstrated how 5G capability will improve inter-vehicle communication to detect vulnerable road users such as motorcyclists.

Ficosa used Barcelona’s 5G network to demonstrate its Bitax telematic platform which combines Wi-Fi and cellular technology to operate vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) and vehicle-to-infrastructure (V2X) technology.

V2V and V2X uses sensors in each vehicle to detect the other, or an obstacle and then send alerts to the other vehicle to avoid a collision.

Ducati has been working with Bosch on a similar system and plans to introduce it next year.

Bosch radar warns riders of traffic autonomous 5g
Bosch radar warns riders of traffic

However, Ficosa is the first to launch the technology after connecting 500 vehicles in Denver, Colorado.

In its Barcelona demonstration, Ficosa showed how Bitax could detect a pedestrian via a thermal camera in traffic lights, a cyclist equipped with a “high-precision geolocation” unit and a car stopped by the roadside in low-light conditions.

The company says this proves the tech can also detect other vulnerable road users such as motorcyclists.5g V2V autonomous automated

“These use cases show how C-V2X technology offers a safer and more comfortable driving experience by allowing the vehicle to communicate with everything around it (other cars, traffic lights, traffic signals, pedestrians, cyclists, motorbikes, etc).

“For cars to ‘talk’ to the city, however, latency must be kept to a minimum. So, it is essential to roll out 5G capabilities.”

That means they need the higher-frequency signals of the next-generation network which has shorter range but less radio interference.

5G advantages/disadvantages

However, there are advantages and disadvantages in the faster network.

Speeds can be up to 10Gbps which is about 1000 times faster than most 4G signals. It is claimed it will download a movie in 10 seconds.

That would make it even faster than the best broadband network.

Great! So drivers will be tempted to watch Netflix instead of paying attention to the road.

Distracted drivers are already a major danger to riders.

St Paul Police Department has even axed its popular motorcycle unit over distracted driving crashes.

cops distracted drivers
Image from St Paul Police Department Facebook page

Apart from Barcelona, 5G has already been rolled out in some parts of the USA, South Korea, Sweden, Estonia, Turkey, Japan and China. Australia is expected to introduce 5G next year.

Samsung and several other Android brands will release 5G phones this year, but Apple will wait until 2020.

While 5G might help with the coming wave of automated and semi-automated vehicles using VC2V and V2X technology, it may not work in remote areas where riders are more likely to travel.

However, like current 4G phones, your next-gen phone will also be able to use previous generation signals for phone calls and data use.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Automatic brakes in cars; motorbikes next?

Automatic brakes that sense an imminent crash and activate an emergency stop have been endorsed in all new cars from 2020. Are motorcycles next?

The United Nations Economic Commission for Europe says 40 countries have agreed to require new cars and light commercial vehicles be equipped with automatic brakes.

Those countries include Australia, Japan and the European Union, but not the US, India or China.

The decision is based on a joint study by Euro NCAP and Australasian NCAP which concluded that automatic brakes would lead to a 38% reduction in real-world rear-end crashes at low speeds.

Automatic brakes concern riders

Riders have two major concerns about this mandate.

The first is that the systems work on sensors which may not sense a small motorcycle.

After all, they haven’t been too successful so far with several incidents where automated cars have crashed into motorcycles.

Surely these sensors should be perfected before they are mandated.

ABS alcohol locks autonomous combined mileage automatic brakes

Another major concern for riders is that these automated braking systems could be coming to motorcycles soon.

Bosch is already developing similar systems with companies such as BMW, Ducati and KTM.

Once developed, it won’t be long before UN authorities decide they should also be mandated.

Such systems have been advocated by internationally awarded Aussie academic Professor Raphael Grzebieta who also supports wire rope barriers, lower speed and hi-vis riders!

If you don’t think it can happen, ABS and linked brakes have already been mandated on bikes sold in Australia thanks to overseas agreements and academics’ whims and research.

ABS regulationsabs mandatory combined braking assist regulations automatic brakes

From November 2019, all new motorcycle models sold in Australia over 125cc must have ABS, while bikes with lower engine capacities must have either ABS or combined brakes systems (CBS).

The new Australian ABS regulations only affect new models made after that date.

All other existing models won’t need to be upgraded to ABS until November 2021.

(The laws only affect new motorcycles made after these dates. It is not retrospective.)

There are exemptions for enduro, trials bikes and trail bikes under 250cc.

If the bike has switchable ABS, the default setting when the bike is turned off and turned back on again will be for ABS to be active. We do not know of a motorcycle that allows ABS to switched off on the fly.

Click here for the full regulations.

CBS is described as any braking system where one control pedal or lever activates some portion of the brakes on front and back wheels.

ABS regs worldwide

ABS alcohol lock road safety safe automatic brakes

While ABS is becoming mandatory around the world, the USA has no such requirement.

Europe: Mandatory ABS for all new models above 125cc from January 2016 and for all existing models above 125cc from January 2017. 50cc can have ABS or CBS.

Japan: ABS on new models above 125cc from October 2018 and all existing models above 125cc from October 2021. 50cc must have ABS or CBS.

India: ABS >125cc on new models from April 2018 and all models >125cc from April 2019. Under 125cc ABS or CBS.

China: New models >250cc from July 2019 and existing from July 2020 must have ABS on front and rear wheels. Under 250 ABS or CBS.

Brazil: ABS for 300cc and above ramping up from 2016-19. Below 300cc ABS or CBS, off-road excluded.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com