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Articles

Differential benefit of sensor system field-of-view and range in pedestrian automated emergency braking systems

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Pages S111-S115 | Received 07 Mar 2021, Accepted 26 Jul 2021, Published online: 01 Sep 2021
 

Abstract

Objective

Current Pedestrian Automatic Emergency Braking (P-AEB) systems often use a combination of radar and cameras to detect pedestrians and automatically apply braking to prevent or mitigate an impending collision. However, these current sensor systems might have a restricted field-of-view (FOV) which may not detect all pedestrians. Advanced sensors like LiDAR can have a wider FOV that may substantially help improve detection. The objective of this study was to determine the influence of FOV and range on the effectiveness of P-AEB systems to determine the potential benefit of advanced sensors.

Methods

This study utilized vehicle-pedestrian crashes from the Pedestrian Crash Data Study (PCDS) to calculate pre-crash pedestrian and vehicle trajectories. A computational model was then applied to simulate the crash with a hypothetical P-AEB system. The model was designed to be able to vary the system’s field-of-view (FOV), range, time-to-collision of activation, and system latency. In this study we estimated how the FOV and range of advanced sensors could affect P-AEB system effectiveness at avoiding crashes and reducing impact speed. Sensor range was varied from 25 − 100 m and sensor FOV was varied from ±10° to ±90°.

Results

Sensors simulated with a range of 50 m or greater performed only approximately 1% better than with a 25 m range. Field-of-view had a larger effect on estimated system avoidance capabilities with a ± 10° FOV sensor estimated to avoid 46-47% of collisions compared to 91-92% for a ± 90° FOV sensor. The system was able to avoid a greater percentage of cases in which the vehicle was traveling straight at sensor FOVs of ±30° and below. Among the unavoided crashes with a sensor FOV of ±90°, the average impact velocity using a 100 m range sensor was 7.4 m/s which was 3.1 m/s lower than a 25 m range sensor.

Conclusions

Sensor ranges above 25 m were not found to significantly affect estimated crash avoidance potential, but had a small effect on impact mitigation. Sensor FOV had a larger effect on crash avoidance up to a FOV of ±60° with little additional benefit at larger FOVs.

Acknowledgments

The authors would also like to acknowledge Jordan Moon for her work digitizing the PCDS trajectories.

Additional information

Funding

The authors would like to acknowledge the Toyota Collaborative Safety Research Center (CSRC) and Toyota Motor Corporation for funding this research study.

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