Publication | Closed Access
Effects of Model Complexity on the Performance of Automated Vehicle Steering Controllers: Model Development, Validation and Comparison
191
Citations
17
References
1995
Year
Automotive EngineeringEngineeringVehicle ControlModel ComplexityVehicle DynamicAdvanced Driver-assistance SystemAutonomous Highway VehiclesLateral ControlComplexitySystems EngineeringVehicle DynamicsModeling And SimulationAutomated Guided VehicleKinematicsTransportation EngineeringDesignAutonomous DrivingAerospace EngineeringAutomationModel DevelopmentRoad Traffic ControlAutomated Vehicle
SUMMARY Recent research on autonomous highway vehicles has begun to focus on lateral control strategies. The initial work has focused on vehicle control during low-g maneuvers at constant vehicle speed, typical of lane merging and normal highway driving. In this paper, and its companion paper, to follow, the lateral control of vehicles during high-g emergency maneuvers is addressed. Models of the vehicle dynamics are developed, showing the accuracy of the different models under low and high-g conditions. Specifically, body roll, tire and drive-train dynamics, tire force saturation, and tire side force lag are shown to be important effects to include in models for emergency maneuvers. Current controllers, designed for low-g maneuvers only, neglect these effects. The follow on paper demonstrates the performance of lateral controllers during high-g lateral emergency maneuvers using these vehicle models.
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