Title :
Inter-vehicle communication: technical issues on vehicle control application
Author :
Aoki, Masayoshi ; Fujii, Haruki
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Seikei Univ., Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
10/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Mutual exchange of status data between vehicles in close proximity is the basis for safe vehicle operation. Application areas range from driver assistance/warning to fully autonomous driving. To enable this data exchange we need an intervehicle communication (IVC) system. Vehicles involved in mutual data exchange form a kind of local area network; however, the characteristics of this network are quite different from those of conventional networks. The configuration of this kind of network changes from time to time, in terms of organization, proximity group, group position, and relative position; therefore, it is very challenging to establish. The authors have been working on this problem from the point of view of communication media and protocol. The characteristics and requirements of IVC are discussed, and several preliminary communication protocols are proposed. The authors also present some experimental results from the implementation of a function integrating communication by infrared ray with a gap-measuring technique by the vision system
Keywords :
automotive electronics; data communication; distance measurement; land mobile radio; optical communication; protocols; road traffic; road vehicles; traffic control; wireless LAN; autonomous driving; communication media; communication protocol; driver assistance/warning; experimental results; gap-measuring technique; group position; infrared ray; intervehicle communication system; local area network; network configuration; network organization; proximity group; radio LAN; relative position; safe vehicle operation; status data exchange; vehicle control application; vision system; Automatic voltage control; Broadcasting; Communication system control; Intelligent control; Lamps; Local area networks; Remotely operated vehicles; Road safety; Telecommunication network reliability; Vehicle driving;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE