The present invention relates to a method and system for calculating and displaying travel route information using a navigation system.
Navigation systems include networked computer devices which accurately determine a position of a user using global positioning data. The position is then presented to the user via a geocoded map. Turn-by-turn directions may be presented to a particular destination from the user's position or another recorded position. Map data including topographical and road network information is typically communicated to a host machine, e.g., a vehicle navigation system, cell phone, personal digital assistant, or a web server, which then processes and presents the information via a graphical display, text-based driving directions, and/or speech-based driving directions.
Using geospatial data, the host machine can provide precise directions to any location contained in a referenced database. Directions may be tailored to a user's preference using a criterion such as shortest driving distance, fastest travel route, or easiest/least complicated travel route. Additionally, emerging hybrid or extended-range electric vehicle designs may allow users to select a most economical route or “eco-route”, i.e., a recommended travel route that minimizes fossil fuel consumption by directing the user to travel routes that would tend to extend the electrical operating range of the vehicle relative to other possible routes.
A navigation system and method are disclosed herein which geometrically constrain a recommended or reference travel route using a cost function. The function considers a cost of deviating from a reference geometric path, e.g., an arc, a straight line, or another preferred geometric feature set, such that the auxiliary travel route that is ultimately presented is constrained to some extent by the reference geometric path. The present method may be encoded as a computational algorithm executed by a host machine, with the geometrically-constrained auxiliary travel route presented to the user graphically on a display screen as a map trace and/or as text-based driving directions, and/or as a broadcast of audible turn-by-turn driving directions.
Under certain circumstances a recommended travel route presented to a user may remain less than optimal in a geometric sense. For example, conventional navigation algorithms may recommend a travel route having a potentially undesirable geometric trait such as frequent route crossovers or switchbacks, where a driver is instructed to cross back and forth over a primary road multiple times in a zig-zag pattern. Such traits may be presented when a user selects calculation and presentation of an eco-route, although fastest, shortest, or easiest routes may occasionally contain similar geometric traits. Depending on the degree of deviation from a geometrically desirable reference path, users may be inclined to disregard at least some of these recommended travel routes.
Accordingly, a navigation system is disclosed herein for use with a geospatial database, whether aboard a vehicle or otherwise. The navigation system includes a presentation device and a host machine in communication with the geospatial database. The host machine determines a reference travel route between a route origin and a route destination using mapping data from the geospatial database, and calculates a geometrically-constrained auxiliary travel route as a function of a cost of deviating from a reference geometric path. The host machine then presents information describing the auxiliary travel route using the presentation device.
The reference geometric path may be one of a straight line, an arc, and a set of road segments having a predetermined geometric feature. The cost of deviating may include at least one of a distance of deviating from the reference geometric path, and a number of crossings or switchbacks of the reference travel route(s) with respect to the reference geometric path.
A method of operating the navigation system described above includes using the host machine to calculate a geometrically-constrained auxiliary travel route using mapping data from the geospatial database and a reference geometric path, wherein the auxiliary travel route is geometrically-constrained with respect to one or more reference travel paths using a cost function of deviating from the reference geometric path. The method also includes presenting information describing the auxiliary travel route using the presentation device.
The method may include assigning costs to different segments of the reference travel route(s) as a function of at least one of: a distance of deviating from the reference geometric path and a number of crossings or switchbacks of the reference geometric path by the various reference travel routes.
The above features and advantages and other features and advantages of the present invention are readily apparent from the following detailed description of the best modes for carrying out the invention when taken in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring to the drawings wherein like reference numbers correspond to like or similar components throughout the several figures, and beginning with
As used herein, the term “geospatial database” refers to a geographic information system containing geospatial data 17 of multiple contiguous locations. Geospatial database 16 may be remotely located with respect to the navigation system 10 as shown, with the geospatial data 17 being accessible by the host machine 12 using an optional transmitter/receiver pair 19, 21. When geospatial database 16 is local, e.g., stored on mapping software accessed directly by the host machine 12, the database is positioned aboard the vehicle 25, and therefore the transmitter/receiver pair 19, 21 may be omitted.
Alternatively, input device 18 and/or host machine 12 may be portions of a mobile unit, e.g., a portable electronic device such as a touch screen, personal digital assistant (PDA), cell phone, or a laptop or tablet-style computer, depending on the configuration of the navigation system 10. While shown schematically as a single machine in
Presentation device 14 may be any audio/visual device capable of presenting a geographically-constrained auxiliary travel route 13 to a user. For example, presentation device 14 may include a display screen 50 for graphically or visually displaying a travel route using a graphical route/map trace and/or text-based driving directions, and/or an audio speaker 60 for broadcasting turn-by-turn driving directions as audible speech. Input data 15 may include route origin, route destination, and a user-selected criterion such as fastest route (in time), shortest route (in distance), easiest route (e.g., minimum number of turns or high-speed travel), and economically efficient/eco route (e.g., most fuel-efficient route). In one possible embodiment, presentation device 14 and input device 18 may be a common device, such as a touch-screen capable of detecting and recording the input data 15 by a touch of the user's hand or a stylus.
Host machine 12 selectively executes algorithm 100 to determine a reference travel route using input data 15, e.g., route origin, route destination, and the route criterion noted above, and using geospatial data 17 from the geospatial database 16. The algorithm 100 then calculates the geometrically-constrained auxiliary travel route 13 as a function of a predetermined geometric path 11, which may be selected by a user via the input device 18 in one embodiment, and presents information describing the auxiliary travel route to a user using the presentation device 14.
Referring to
Similarly, reference travel route 30 of
Referring to
At step 104, the host machine 12 references the geospatial database 16 to retrieve the required geospatial data 17, and then calculates one or more reference travel routes, e.g., routes 20 and 30 of
At step 106, the host machine 12 next calculates the geometrically-constrained auxiliary travel route 13 shown in
For example, a cost formula may be applied to each segment of a reference travel route to determine a reference cost (cref) as follows:
c
ref(start,end)
=k
1·d(start,end)
+k
2·t(start,end)
+k
1
·E(start,end)+k4·d
Weights (k1−k5) may be assigned to different constraints, such as distance (d), time (t), and energy use (E). Additionally, geometric constraints can be weighted to generate routes that blend acceptable efficiency with a desired geometry and/or topographical or geographical feature. In the above formula, cost penalties may be assessed when a given reference travel route crosses the reference geometric path, an event indicated by (X), and/or proportionately higher costs may be assessed the farther one departs from the reference geometric path 11 as indicated by (dmin). Allowances may be made for obstacles, either in the cost function or in the designation of the reference geometric path 11. For example, a straight line may pass through a body of water or other topographical or geographical feature, requiring an arc or a more circuitous trace that still approximates the reference geometric path 11.
Using the navigation system 10 and algorithm 100 disclosed above, a geometrically-constrained auxiliary route 13 is presented that can satisfy desired route criteria without generating a travel route that may be perceived as being geometrically undesirable to a user. Although one reference travel route 20, 30 is shown for simplicity in each of
While the best modes for carrying out the invention have been described in detail, those familiar with the art to which this invention relates will recognize various alternative designs and embodiments for practicing the invention within the scope of the appended claims.