Affiliation(s)
1. Vehicle and Road Safety, Fraunhofer IVI, Dresden 01067, Germany
2. Research Accident, Robert Bosch GmbH, Stuttgart 70465, Germany
3. Safety Research & Technical Affairs, Toyota Motor Europe, Zaventem 1930, Belgium
ABSTRACT
The
progress of safety technologies, based on the continuous advances in vehicle
crash worthiness, restraint systems and active safety
functions made traffic safer than ever before. Latest developments heading from
assisted Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) to Automated
Driving (AD), lead to more and more complex real-world situations to be
handled, going from standard driving tasks up to critical situations, which may
cause a collision. Therefore, throughout the development process of such
systems, it becomes common to use simulation technologies in order to assess
these systems in advance. To gain results out of the simulation, input data are required; typically,
from various sources, so the requirements can be covered. Thus, the challenge
of scoping with different input sources arises. To come along with that
problem, two main kinds of input data will be needed in general: (1) the descriptive
parameter covering all border conditions, so called parameter room; (2) the system
specifications for estimation. The quality of the results correlates strongly with the quality of inputs given. In case of ADAS systems and AD
functions, the second kind of input data is very well known. Major challenges relate to the first kind of
input data. Thus, the paper will describe a way to create input data that cover all descriptive parameters
needed from normal driving up to the collision by the combination of accident
analysis and real-world road traffic observations. The method aims at being applicable to different data sources and to
different countries.
KEYWORDS
ADAS, automated driving, simulation, accident data, traffic
observation, database.
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References