DocumentCode
1642565
Title
Steering behaviors for autonomous vehicles in virtual environments
Author
Wang, Hongling ; Kearney, Joseph K. ; Cremer, James ; Willemsen, Peter
Author_Institution
Dept of Comput. Sci., Iowa Univ., IA, USA
fYear
2005
Firstpage
155
Lastpage
162
Abstract
This paper presents steering behaviors that control autonomous vehicles populating roadways in virtual urban environments. Behavior programming is facilitated by a set of representations of the environment that use convenient frames of reference in natural coordinate systems. Roadway surfaces are modeled as three-dimensional ribbons that make the local orientation of the road explicit and allow relative distances on the road to be simply computed. Roads and intersections are connected to form a ribbon network. An egocentric representation called a path melds road and intersection segments into a single, continuous ribbon that captures the vehicle´s short-term plan of navigation. A topological structure called a route supports wayfinding. We describe how the interrelated ribbon, path, and route representations are used to build multi-component behaviors that plan routes and safely navigate through traffic filled road networks - tracking lanes, shifting lanes to avoid congestion, anticipating lane changes needed to make turns dictated by the route, negotiating intersections, and respecting the rules of the road.
Keywords
digital simulation; knowledge representation; multi-agent systems; road traffic; road vehicles; traffic engineering computing; virtual reality; 3D ribbons; autonomous agent behavior; autonomous vehicle steering behavior; behavior programming; egocentric representation; lane changes; multicomponent behaviors; ribbon network; road congestion; road intersections; road rules; roadway surface modeling; roadways; route planning; route representation; shifting lanes; topological structure; tracking lanes; traffic filled road networks; vehicle navigation; virtual environments; virtual urban environments; wayfinding; Autonomous agents; Communication system traffic control; Computer science; Dynamic programming; Mobile robots; Navigation; Remotely operated vehicles; Road vehicles; Traffic control; Virtual environment;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Virtual Reality, 2005. Proceedings. VR 2005. IEEE
Conference_Location
Bonn
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8929-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VR.2005.1492769
Filename
1492769
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