Abstract

Robust pedestrian trajectory-tracking is an essential prerequisite to traffic accident prevention. However, it is a challenging task in urban autonomous driving, since the weak backscattered signals from pedestrians with small radar cross-section may be submerged in strong background clutters, especially under adverse weather conditions. On this account, this article presents an integration of detection and tracking (iDT) toward multipedestrian with a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In particular, in contrast to conventional methods, in which the detection and tracking are treated as two separate processes, we address them jointly to ensure the accuracy of continuous detection and tracking in low SNR conditions. Another distinguishing element is that to accommodate the time-varying number of targets, the Bayesian framework is tailored by augmenting the state vector with a multipedestrian evolutional indicator. The advantage is that all targets can be tracked simultaneously by searching the global likelihood ratio of a spectrum once, rather than assigning an individual tracker to each target in conventional methods. Furthermore, through the proposed integrated framework, the data association problem is circumvented because there is no explicit measurement-target assignment process in our approach. In addition, a commercial automotive multiple-input-multiple-output millimeter-wave radar sensor is employed to validate the proposed method. Consequently, numerous simulation and experiment results turn out that iDT shows unique advantages in low-observable multipedestrian tracking compared with traditional methods.

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