Abstract

The motion cueing algorithm (MCA) is used to reproduce the driving/flying motion sensation of the real land or air vehicles for the users of motion simulator. Highly accurate MCAs are required for the motion simulators to create realistic sensation for the simulator users, otherwise, they might cause motion sickness and user discomfort. Model predictive control (MPC) is a popular technique in development of the high-fidelity MCAs as it is able to consider the motion sensation as well as the workspace constraints of the simulator platform. Tilt coordination in MCA is in charge of creating sustained linear acceleration feeling through tilting the platform cabin and exploiting gravitational acceleration under human motion threshold, to not allow the user to perceive this as a rotational motion. However, the existing MPC-based MCAs have not considered the rate limit to constrain the tilt motion under human threshold which causes violations of the rotational sensation threshold during generating sustained acceleration feeling. Instead, some researchers increase the penalty weights of rotational motions in order to slow down rotational motions. Using this strategy slows down all the simulator rotational motions not only the ones coming from tilt coordination, to generate sustained acceleration feeling, but also from rotational channel (due to real vehicle rotation) which causes motion sensation error and consequently motion sickness. Therefore, as the existing MPC-based MCAs cannot differentiate the rotations of tilt coordination channel (due to sustained acceleration feeling generation), from rotational channel (due to vehicle rotational motions), they are not able to produce accurate rotational motion sensations because of insufficient rotational motions. In this research, a novel decoupled MPC-based MCA is developed to systematically address the issues related to the existing MPC-based MCAs, in terms of inaccurate motion generation, by redesigning the MPC-based MCA using a series of vestibular system-based MPC models and considering tilt rate limit in tilt coordination. The simulation study using MATLAB software is used to verify and validate the proposed MCA compared to the existing MCAs. The proposed decoupled MPC-based MCA is able to generate accurate motion cues compared to those of the existing MCAs.

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