Abstract

The tracking of Vulnerable Road Users (VRU) is one of the vital tasks of autonomous cars. This includes estimating the positions and velocities of VRUs surrounding a car. To do this, VRU trackers must utilize measurements that are received from sensors. However, even the most accurate VRU trackers are affected by measurement noise, background clutter, and VRUs’ interaction and occlusion. Such uncertainties can cause deviations in sensors’ data association, thereby leading to dangerous situations and potentially even the failure of a tracker. The initialization of a data association depends on various parameters. This paper proposes steps to reveal the trade-offs between stochastic model parameters to improve data association’s accuracy in autonomous cars. The proposed steps can reduce the number of false tracks; besides, it is independent of variations in measurement noise and the number of VRUs. Our initialization can reduce the lag between the first detection and initialization of the VRU trackers. As a proof of concept, the procedure is validated using experiments, simulation data, and the publicly available KITTI dataset. Moreover, we compared our initialization method with the most popular approaches that were found in the literature. The results showed that the tracking precision and accuracy increase to 3.6% with the proposed initialization as compared to the state-of-the-art algorithms in tracking VRU.

Highlights

  • The possibility of driving autonomously through an urban environment has been a vision for many years

  • His paper presents a collection of probabilistic elements to initialize the data association of Vulnerable Road User (VRU) trackers in an urban environment

  • We find a trade-off between the parameters in a probabilistic model

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The possibility of driving autonomously through an urban environment has been a vision for many years. They are useful for tracking VRUs, they have difficulties with the precision or accuracy of their tracks

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call