1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a system and method for determining vehicle dynamics and, more particularly, to a system and method for determining vehicle speed and position that employs radar, lidar and/or camera signals.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
Various driver assist systems and autonomous driving operations in vehicles, such as electronic stability control (ECS), adaptive cruise control (ACC), lane keeping (LK), lane changing (LC), etc., require the development of highly robust and precise modules for estimating various vehicle dynamics. Such modules are necessary to provide knowledge of the vehicle position and velocity to control the vehicle along a desired state.
Currently, micro-electromechanical system (MEMS) based inertial measurement units (IMUs) and wheel speed sensors are used to provide vehicle speed. However, the performance of wheel speed sensors is reduced during wheel slippage conditions, such as when the driver performs cornering and swerving maneuvers. Therefore, a dead-reckoning strategy for an IMU is utilized at these times to produce vehicle velocity and position of the vehicle. Because MEMS IMUs usually have larger errors than expensive gyro-systems, errors in position and velocity can grow rapidly. Thus, current automotive-grade MEMS IMUs alone are typically not suitable for dead-reckoning for a long period of time.
It has been proposed in the art to integrate GPS and a low cost MEMS IMU to address the non-zero bias and drift issues of an IMU. However, few of these systems address the issue that the GPS signals are not always available, such as when the vehicle is in “urban canyons” where an insufficient number of satellites are tracked to determine the position and the velocity of the vehicle.
Future advanced driver assist systems (ADS) for vehicles will include various object detection sensors, such as long-range radar and lidar sensors and ultrasonic parking aid sensors. Further, camera-based systems for lane departure warning are currently being developed. Thus, there has been an increased interest in utilizing data from these devices to estimate vehicle self-motion. For example, one system proposes to use an in-vehicle mounted calibrating camera to estimate self-motion and to detect moving objects on roads. Another proposed system uses a single camera for computing ego-motion of the vehicle based on optical flow. Further work includes the use of stereo-vision to the ego-pose estimation problem in urban environments. However, none of these approaches alone is reliable enough in cluttered scenes. Further, few of these systems make explicit the essential need for system integration that will be necessary in the future commercial development of this technology.
In accordance with the teachings of the present invention, a system and method are disclosed that estimates vehicle dynamics, including vehicle position and velocity, using a stationary object. The system includes an object sensor, such as a radar, lidar or camera, that provides object signals of the stationary object. The system also includes in-vehicle sensors that provide signals representative of vehicle motion, such as steering wheel angle, yaw-rate, longitudinal speed, longitudinal acceleration and lateral acceleration. The system also includes an association processor that receives the object signals, and provides object tracking through multiple frames of data. The system also includes a longitudinal state estimation processor that receives the object signals and the sensor signals, and provides a correction of the vehicle speed in a forward direction. The system also includes a lateral state estimation processor that receives the object signals and the sensor signals, and provides a correction of the vehicle speed in a lateral direction.
Additional features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description and appended claims taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
The following discussion of the embodiments of the invention directed to a system and method for estimating vehicle dynamics using radar, lidar and/or camera signals is merely exemplary in nature, and is in no way intended to limit the invention or its applications or uses.
As will be discussed in detail below, the present invention proposes an integrated system using low-cost MEMS IMUs and other in-vehicle dynamic sensors to correct vehicle dynamics estimations in real-time using supporting sensors, such as radar, lidar, vision systems or combinations thereof. This will allow either improved performance from existing sensors or the same performance from smaller and cheaper sensors.
The object sensors 12 determine the ego-motion of the vehicle from the measurement of stationary objects.
υx=−(x′−x)/ΔT (1)
υy=−(y′−y)/ΔT (2)
r=−(Θ′−Θ)/ΔT (3)
Where the quantities (x,y) and (x′,y′) are the positions of the stationary object 30 at time t and t+Δt, respectively, and υx,υy and r are the longitudinal velocity, lateral velocity and yaw-rate, respectively, of the vehicle 26.
The range calculations referred to above can be extended using a bicycle model of a vehicle 32, shown in
The radar output is a list of objects {oi|i=1, . . . , K} at time t. The measurement of the i-th object oi contains range ρ, range rate {dot over (ρ)} and azimuth angle Θ. Usually the field-of-view of a long-range radar is narrow, for example, 15°, therefore each detected object lies in front of the vehicle in the x-axis. Equation (4) below can be used to determine if the object is stationary.
|{dot over (r)} cos Θ−υx|<T (4)
The vehicle dynamics can be represented by a state vector z whose components include:
The longitudinal state estimation processor 16 receives longitudinal position, longitudinal speed, longitudinal acceleration and vehicle speed signals from the sensors, and uses Kalman filtering and an auto-regression noise model to provide a corrected longitudinal acceleration axo, a corrected longitudinal velocity υxo and wheel slippage of the vehicle. The sensors 20, such as the accelerometers and wheel sensors, give measurements of the longitudinal acceleration axo and the velocity υxo of the vehicle. The estimation processor 16 may receive longitudinal position and longitudinal speed of the vehicle from the radar input and longitudinal acceleration and vehicle speed from the in-vehicle sensors 20.
The processor 16 considers the acceleration correction as a random walk process. The longitudinal system of the vehicle can be written as:
Where ∈ is a zero-mean white random process with a Gaussian distribution.
Given a measurement of oi=(pi,{dot over (p)}i,Θi) from the i-th object, the observation equation can be written as:
pi cos Θi=xi+v1 (8)
{dot over (P)}i cos Θi=−υx+v2 (9)
υxo=υx+v3 (10)
Where the quantities v1, v2 and v3 are observation noises that are modeled as Guassian white random processes.
The Kalman filtering process in the processor 16 is used to determine the corrected longitudinal acceleration ax+δax, the corrected longitudinal velocity υx and wheel slippage if the following condition is satisfied.
|υx−υxo|>T (11)
Where T is a threshold.
The lateral state estimation processor 18 receives an object azimuth angle, object lateral offset, steering wheel angle, yaw-rate and lateral acceleration signals from the sensors, and uses Kalman filtering and an auto-regression noise model to provide a yaw-rate correction, a lateral acceleration correction and a lateral velocity signal of the vehicle. The in-vehicle sensors 20, such as the accelerometer and yaw-rate sensors, give measurements of lateral acceleration ayo and yaw-rate ro of the vehicle. The steering wheel angle sensor gives the steering wheel angle δf. The correction of the yaw-rate is modeled as a random walk. By letting L=a+b be the wheel-base and cf and cr be the cornering stiffness coefficients of the front and rear tires, the lateral plant model can be written as:
Where ∈1 and ∈2 are two white Gaussian random processes.
Given a measurement of oi−(pi,{dot over (p)}i,Θi) from the i-th object, the observation equation can be written as:
pi sin Θi=yi+v1 (15)
ayo=υx(ro+δr)+v2 (16)
Where the quantities v1 and v2 are observation noises that are modeled as Gaussian white random processes. Here v1 is the error introduced by the measurement and v2 is the error introduced by banked road or sensor measurements.
The Kalman filter in the lateral estimation processor 18 is used to determine the corrected yaw-rate (ro+δr), the corrected lateral acceleration (ay+δay), and the lateral velocity υy.
Most range sensors used in the art report an object with an identifier that remains the same across different time frames. This information is used to match object maps from consecutive frames. Mathematically, it can be assumed that the sensor gives the object map {oi(t)lii(t)|i=1, . . . , K1} at time i and map {oj(t′),li(t′)|j=1, . . . , Kt′} at time t′, where l denotes the object identifier. Therefore, the matches of consecutive maps can be defined as:
{(oi(t),o′j(t′))|li(t)=lj(t′),1≦i≦Kt,1≦j≦kt′} (17)
In one embodiment, a monocular camera can be used as the object sensor. The camera recovers motion of the vehicle navigating on the ground surface by tracking certain scene elements on the ground. In a monocular sequence, a nomography transformation exists between two views for the elements on the same plane. That is, for a set of point correspondences xi,x′i between two images, assuming that the points are coplanar, there is a homography matrix F defined as;
x′i=Fxi (18)
Where x denotes a homogeneous image coordinate (u,υ,m)T, which represents the image pixel at
A world coordinate at time t is defined so that the plane x-o-y are coincident to the ground plane, as shown in
F=K(R−cnT/d)K−1 (19)
Where K is the intrinsic matrix, R is the camera rotation matrix, c is the camera center coordinates and π=(nT,d)T is the plane equation (nTX+d=0), all in world coordinate system.
In
Then, the projection matrix P′ at time t′ can be written as P′=KR′[I|−c′], where R′=RΔR, and c′=c+Δc.
To apply equation (19), the world coordinate system is moved to the camera center at time t. The new projection matrices become:
P=K[I|0] (21)
P′=K└R′R−1|−R′Δc┘ (22)
The ground plane becomes (Rn0,d). Thus:
F=K(R′R−1+R′Δcn0TRRT/d)K−1 (23)
Applying RT=R−1 and R′=RΔR gives:
F=KRΔR(I+Δcn0T/d)(KR)−1 (24)
If the calibrated camera is considered, i.e., K and R are known in advance, the essential matrix E can be computed as:
E=(KR)−1FKR=ΔR(I+Δcn0T/d) (25)
With n=(0,0,1)T, Δc=(Δx,Δy,0)T and equation (20), the essential matrix E can be written as:
Usually the rotation angle θ is small (i.e., sin θ<<1) with two consecutive views. Thus, equation (26) can be approximated as:
The essential matrix E in equation (27) is actually a two-dimensional transformation having a translation Δx/d,Δy/d and a rotation θ.
Given a set of matched feature point pairs {(xi,x′1|i=1, . . . , N)}, the self-motion estimation can be formulated as a least square estimation:
Which can be transformed into:
Where {circumflex over (x)}=KRx and {circumflex over (x)}′=KRx′ if the camera's calibration matrices K and R are known.
Examining equation (27), the normalized points between the two views are related to each other with a rigid rotation (Δθ) and translation (Δx/d,Δy/d). The following method can be utilized to recover the parameters.
The input is N pairs of the matched ground feature points {(xi,x′i)|i=1, . . . , N} and the camera's intrinsic and extrinsic parametric matrices K and R.
The output is the estimated self-motion parameters c2=(Δx/d,Δy/d) and
1. For all xi and x′i, calculate {circumflex over (x)}i=KRxi and {circumflex over (x)}′i=KRx′i.
2. Compute
3. Compute:
4. Let the singular value composition of the matrix C be written as C=UWVT
Then, the rotation R2 and the translation t2 can be solved as:
A Harris corner detector can be used to detect the feature points in the two consecutive images. Then, a correlation operation of the images is conducted to find the matching between the found feature points. The image point at (u,υ) in image I and the image point at (u′,υ′) in image I′ is matched if, and only if, the following conditions are satisfied:
The estimated motion parameters in the previous cycle are used to guide the matching process. The following outliers deletion method is used to reject scene elements above the ground or from dynamic moving objects, such as vehicles in the road.
The input is two sets of the scene elements (normalized with intrinsic and extrinsic matrices) in pixel coordinates, denoted by {(ûi,{circumflex over (υ)}i)|i=1, . . . , N} and {(ûj,{circumflex over (υ)}j)|j=1, . . . , M}.
The output is matched point pairs and estimated motion parameters.
1. Predict the location of the elements in the previous frame by using previous motion parameters:
2. Use the correlation method to match the sets of the predicted points {(ûi,{circumflex over (υ)}i)} and {(û′j,{circumflex over (υ)}′j)}.
3. Randomly pick no less than four matched pairs that are not co-linear, and then derive the self-motion parameters using the method discussed above.
4. Validate the derived motion parameters by using the matched pairs from step 3.
5. If the error of the majority of the matched points are sufficiently small, exit the process, otherwise, go to step 3.
Similarly as the range sensor described above, the ego-motion across multiple frames can be estimated by tracking. The plant and observation models can be written as follows.
The state of motion is denoted by:
Let υxo,axo,ro, and ayo denote measured longitudinal speed, longitudinal acceleration, yaw rate and lateral acceleration, respectively. Then, the plant model can be written as:
Where ∈1,∈2 and ∈3 are zero-mean Gaussian white noise.
Let the motion parameters recovered from two consecutive views be denoted by (Δθo(t),Δxo(t),Δyo(t)), where Δθo is the rotation angle and (Δxo,Δyo) is the translation. The observation equations can be written as:
Δxo=υxΔT+v1 (39)
Δyo=υyΔT+v2 (40)
Δθo=(ro+δr)ΔT+v3 (41)
ayo=υx(ro+δr)+v4 (42)
Where v1,v2,v3, and v4 are the noises introduced by the measurements, usually modified as white zero-mean Gaussian random processes.
Thus, the Kalman filter can be used to determine the state variables.
The foregoing discussion discloses and describes merely exemplary embodiments of the present invention. One skilled in the art will readily recognize from such discussion and from the accompanying drawings and claims that various changes, modifications and variations can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5229944 | Yasuno | Jul 1993 | A |
5428532 | Yasuno | Jun 1995 | A |
5648905 | Izumi et al. | Jul 1997 | A |
5979581 | Ravani et al. | Nov 1999 | A |
5986601 | Sugimoto | Nov 1999 | A |
6128569 | Fukushima | Oct 2000 | A |
6362773 | Pochmuller | Mar 2002 | B1 |
6671595 | Lu et al. | Dec 2003 | B2 |
6853886 | Mori | Feb 2005 | B2 |
6940448 | Knoop et al. | Sep 2005 | B2 |
7366602 | Xu et al. | Apr 2008 | B2 |
7620477 | Bruemmer | Nov 2009 | B2 |
7765065 | Stiller | Jul 2010 | B2 |
7801659 | Leineweber et al. | Sep 2010 | B2 |
7835854 | Yamamoto et al. | Nov 2010 | B2 |
20050004762 | Takahama et al. | Jan 2005 | A1 |
20080082245 | Fayyad et al. | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20080128546 | Olsson et al. | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20080172156 | Joh et al. | Jul 2008 | A1 |
20080234933 | Chowdhary et al. | Sep 2008 | A1 |
20080319610 | Oechsle et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20100017128 A1 | Jan 2010 | US |