Abstract

Motorcycle drivers are considered among the most vulnerable road users, as attested by the number of crashes increasing every year. The significant part of the fatalities relates to “single vehicle” loss of control in bends. During this investigation, a system based on an instrumented multi-sensor platform and an algorithmic study was developed to accurately reconstruct motorcycle trajectories achieved when negotiating bends. This system is used by the French Gendarmerie in order to objectively evaluate and to examine the way riders take their bends in order to better train riders to adopt a safe trajectory and to improve road safety. Data required for the reconstruction are acquired using a motorcycle that has been fully instrumented (in VIROLO++ Project) with several redundant sensors (reference sensors and low-cost sensors) which measure the rider actions (roll, steering) and the motorcycle behavior (position, velocity, acceleration, odometry, heading, and attitude). The proposed solution allowed the reconstruction of motorcycle trajectories in bends with a high accuracy (equal to that of fixed point positioning). The developed algorithm will be used by the French Gendarmerie in order to objectively evaluate and examine the way riders negotiate bends. It will also be used for initial training and retraining in order to better train riders to learn and estimate a safe trajectory and to increase the safety, efficiency and comfort of motorcycle riders.

Highlights

  • Motorcycle drivers are considered the most vulnerable road users

  • We firstly explore and evaluate the usual methods of trajectory reconstruction

  • The challenge in our work is to study several motorcycle trajectory reconstruction algorithms in order to design an embedded system, with an optimal set of low-cost sensors that allows the reconstruction of the motorcycle trajectory with high precision without using GPS

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Summary

Introduction

Motorcycle drivers are considered the most vulnerable road users. In France, such riders account for more than 20% of all road fatalities (compared with 15% in Europe as a whole) and 43% of road injuries (ONISR, 2014). For the same distance traveled, the risk to be killed in a fatal crash is 35 times higher for a motorcyclist than for an automobilist [1]. More than 50% of individual motorcycle crashes are due to loss of control in bends (including crossroads and intersections) because of the complexity of motorcycle dynamics and the intrinsic instability of such vehicles. In 2012, in France, more than a third of all the powered two wheels (PTW) fatalities occurred in bends (248 killed). Counter-measures are needed to improve road safety and decrease the risk of crashes in bends

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