Title :
Passive, decentralized, and fully autonomous intersection access control
Author :
Khoury, Joud ; Khoury, Joud
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Civil Eng., Lebanese American Univ., Byblos, Lebanon
Abstract :
Current research on autonomous intersection management makes a set of assumptions including active Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) or Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) communications, and/or centralized control. While they enhance the efficiency of the solution, such assumptions have inherent security and privacy drawbacks and require high infrastructure costs. This paper sets to investigate an alternative solution to autonomous intersection management that is decentralized (no centralized controller) and passive (no vehicle communications). Our scheme permits autonomous vehicles approaching an intersection to make localized collision-free access decisions based purely on sensing and beacon information. Besides demonstrating the feasibility of a fully autonomous and decentralized approach, we show that our scheme operationally outperforms a standard actuated signal and all-way stop control. Our decentralized approach trades off optimality for low cost, and enhanced security, privacy, and practicality.
Keywords :
authorisation; control engineering computing; data privacy; mobile communication; road vehicles; traffic engineering computing; V2I; V2V; all-way stop control; autonomous intersection management; autonomous vehicles; beacon information; decentralized intersection access control; fully autonomous intersection access control; passive intersection access control; privacy drawbacks; security drawbacks; standard actuated signal; vehicle-to-infrastructure communications; vehicle-to-vehicle communications; Delays; Mobile robots; Safety; Sensors; Synchronization; Vehicle crash testing; Vehicles;
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSC), 2014 IEEE 17th International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Qingdao
DOI :
10.1109/ITSC.2014.6958176