ROAIMay 2, 2021

A LiDAR Assisted Control Module with High Precision in Parking Scenarios for Autonomous Driving Vehicle

arXiv:2105.00398v1Has Code
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a specific precision-demanding task in autonomous driving where human drivers often fail, offering an incremental improvement for industrial applications.

The paper tackled the challenge of achieving high lateral precision in parking scenarios for autonomous vehicles, achieving an end-to-end lateral precision with 3σ ≤ 5 centimeters, which outperformed both the original Apollo system and highly trained human drivers.

Autonomous driving has been quite promising in recent years. The public has seen Robotaxi delivered by Waymo, Baidu, Cruise, and so on. While autonomous driving vehicles certainly have a bright future, we have to admit that it is still a long way to go for products such as Robotaxi. On the other hand, in less complex scenarios autonomous driving may have the potentiality to reliably outperform humans. For example, humans are good at interactive tasks (while autonomous driving systems usually do not), but we are often incompetent for tasks with strict precision demands. In this paper, we introduce a real-world, industrial scenario of which human drivers are not capable. The task required the ego vehicle to keep a stationary lateral distance (i.e. 3? <= 5 centimeters) with respect to a reference. To address this challenge, we redesigned the control module from Baidu Apollo open-source autonomous driving system. A precise (3? <= 2 centimeters) Error Feedback System was first built to partly replace the localization module. Then we investigated the control module thoroughly and added a real-time calibration algorithm to gain extra precision. We also built a simulation to fine-tune the control parameters. After all those works, the results are encouraging, showing that an end-to-end lateral precision with 3? <= 5 centimeters has been achieved. Further, we show that the results not only outperformed original Apollo modules but also beat specially trained and highly experienced human test drivers.

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