Adaptive Cruise Control Utilizing Noisy Multi-Leader Measurements

A Learning-Based Approach

Journal Article (2024)
Author(s)

Y. Ni (ETH Zürich, Student TU Delft)

VL Knoop (TU Delft - Transport and Planning)

J.F.P. Kooij (TU Delft - Intelligent Vehicles)

B Van Arem (TU Delft - Transport and Planning)

Research Group
Intelligent Vehicles
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/OJITS.2024.3395149
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Intelligent Vehicles
Volume number
5
Pages (from-to)
251-264
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Abstract

A substantial number of vehicles nowadays are equipped with adaptive cruise control (ACC), which adjusts the vehicle speed automatically. However, experiments have found that commercial ACC systems which only detect the direct leader amplify the propagating disturbances in the platoon. This can cause severe traffic congestion when the number of ACC-equipped vehicles increases. Therefore, an ACC system which also considers the second leader further downstream is required. Such a system enables the vehicle to achieve multi-anticipation and hence ensure better platoon stability. Nevertheless, measurements collected from the second leader may be comparatively inaccurate given the limitations of current state-of-the-art sensor technology. This study adopts deep reinforcement learning to develop ACC controllers that besides the input from the first leader exploits the additional information obtained from the second leader, albeit noisy. The simulation experiment demonstrates that even under the influence of noisy measurements, the multi-leader ACC platoon shows smaller disturbance and jerk amplitudes than the one-leader ACC platoon, indicating improved string stability and ride comfort. Practical takeaways are twofold: first, the proposed method can be used to further develop multi-leader ACC systems. Second, even noisy data from the second leader can help stabilize traffic, which makes such systems viable in practice.