Abstract

Automated vehicles make use of multiple sensors to detect their surroundings. Sensors have significantly improved over the years but still face challenges due to the presence of obstacles or adverse weather conditions, among others. Cooperative or collective perception has been proposed to help mitigate these challenges through the exchange of sensor data among vehicles using V2X (Vehicle-to-Everything) communications. Recent studies have shown that cooperative perception can complement on-board sensors and increase the vehicle's awareness beyond its sensors field of view. However, cooperative perception significantly increases the amount of information exchanged by vehicles which can degrade the V2X communication performance and ultimately the effectiveness of cooperative perception. In this context, this study conducts first a dimensioning analysis to evaluate the impact of the sensors' characteristics and the market penetration rate on the operation and performance of cooperative perception. The study then investigates the impact of congestion control on cooperative perception using the Decentralized Congestion Control (DCC) framework defined by ETSI. The study demonstrates that congestion control can negatively impact the perception and latency of cooperative perception if not adequately configured. In this context, this study demonstrates for the first time that the combination of congestion control functions at the Access and Facilities layers can improve the perception achieved with cooperative perception and ensure a timely transmission of the information. The results obtained demonstrate the importance of an adequate configuration of DCC for the development of connected and automated vehicles.

Highlights

  • Automated vehicles use embedded sensors to drive autonomously with low or no human intervention

  • Congestion control algorithms can alter the transmission of V2X messages and could impact the effectiveness of cooperative perception. This paper studies this impact in detail using the Decentralized Congestion Control (DCC) solution defined by ETSI

  • The Reactive approach slightly outperforms the Adaptive one for distances beyond 300m. This improvement is produced due to the higher PDR at the application level of the Reactive approach at such distances (Figure 19) due to its lower CBR and lower packet collisions. All these results clearly show that the combination of congestion control functions at the Access and Facilities layers can significantly improve cooperative perception

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Automated vehicles use embedded sensors to drive autonomously with low or no human intervention. The study analyzes the impact of the market penetration rate and different sensor configurations on the operation and performance of cooperative perception This analysis shows that cooperative perception can significantly increase the communication channel load and activate the operation of congestion control protocols. The study demonstrates that using congestion control protocols only at the Access layer augments the latency (or information age) of cooperative perception messages This negatively impacts connected automated driving that requires. This study demonstrates for the first time that this challenge can be addressed through the combination of congestion control functions at the Access and Facilities layers This combination increases the perception and reduces the latency through the dynamic adaptation of the rate at which cooperative messages are generated and transmitted

STATE OF THE ART
DECENTRALIZED CONGESTION CONTROL
DCC FACILITIES
SCENARIO AND PARAMETERS
Findings
VIII. CONCLUSION
Full Text
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