ROSPSYJun 3, 2019

Localization Requirements for Autonomous Vehicles

arXiv:1906.01061v1269 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the critical need for standardized localization accuracy in autonomous vehicles to improve road safety, though it is incremental as it builds on existing safety frameworks from aviation and rail.

The paper tackles the problem of defining precise localization requirements for autonomous vehicles to ensure safe operation, deriving error bounds based on safety integrity levels and US road geometry standards, resulting in specific numerical requirements such as lateral error bounds of 0.57 m on freeways and 0.29 m on local streets.

Autonomous vehicles require precise knowledge of their position and orientation in all weather and traffic conditions for path planning, perception, control, and general safe operation. Here we derive these requirements for autonomous vehicles based on first principles. We begin with the safety integrity level, defining the allowable probability of failure per hour of operation based on desired improvements on road safety today. This draws comparisons with the localization integrity levels required in aviation and rail where similar numbers are derived at 10^-8 probability of failure per hour of operation. We then define the geometry of the problem, where the aim is to maintain knowledge that the vehicle is within its lane and to determine what road level it is on. Longitudinal, lateral, and vertical localization error bounds (alert limits) and 95% accuracy requirements are derived based on US road geometry standards (lane width, curvature, and vertical clearance) and allowable vehicle dimensions. For passenger vehicles operating on freeway roads, the result is a required lateral error bound of 0.57 m (0.20 m, 95%), a longitudinal bound of 1.40 m (0.48 m, 95%), a vertical bound of 1.30 m (0.43 m, 95%), and an attitude bound in each direction of 1.50 deg (0.51 deg, 95%). On local streets, the road geometry makes requirements more stringent where lateral and longitudinal error bounds of 0.29 m (0.10 m, 95%) are needed with an orientation requirement of 0.50 deg (0.17 deg, 95%).

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