DocumentCode
856522
Title
Video-based lane estimation and tracking for driver assistance: survey, system, and evaluation
Author
McCall, Joel C. ; Trivedi, Mohan M.
Author_Institution
Comput. Vision & Robotics Res. Lab., Univ. of California, San Diego, CA
Volume
7
Issue
1
fYear
2006
fDate
3/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
20
Lastpage
37
Abstract
Driver-assistance systems that monitor driver intent, warn drivers of lane departures, or assist in vehicle guidance are all being actively considered. It is therefore important to take a critical look at key aspects of these systems, one of which is lane-position tracking. It is for these driver-assistance objectives that motivate the development of the novel "video-based lane estimation and tracking" (VioLET) system. The system is designed using steerable filters for robust and accurate lane-marking detection. Steerable filters provide an efficient method for detecting circular-reflector markings, solid-line markings, and segmented-line markings under varying lighting and road conditions. They help in providing robustness to complex shadowing, lighting changes from overpasses and tunnels, and road-surface variations. They are efficient for lane-marking extraction because by computing only three separable convolutions, we can extract a wide variety of lane markings. Curvature detection is made more robust by incorporating both visual cues (lane markings and lane texture) and vehicle-state information. The experiment design and evaluation of the VioLET system is shown using multiple quantitative metrics over a wide variety of test conditions on a large test path using a unique instrumented vehicle. A justification for the choice of metrics based on a previous study with human-factors applications as well as extensive ground-truth testing from different times of day, road conditions, weather, and driving scenarios is also presented. In order to design the VioLET system, an up-to-date and comprehensive analysis of the current state of the art in lane-detection research was first performed. In doing so, a comparison of a wide variety of methods, pointing out the similarities and differences between methods as well as when and where various methods are most useful, is presented
Keywords
computer vision; driver information systems; object detection; road vehicles; video signal processing; circular reflector markings; curvature detection; driver assistance system; driver monitoring; lane position tracking; machine vision; steerable filters; video lane estimation and tracking system; Data mining; Filters; Monitoring; Navigation; Roads; Robustness; Shadow mapping; System testing; Vehicle detection; Vehicle driving; Active safety systems; intelligent vehicles; lane detection; lane-departure warning; machine vision; performance metrics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Intelligent Transportation Systems, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1524-9050
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TITS.2006.869595
Filename
1603550
Link To Document