Developing a Multi-Modal Machine Learning Model For Predicting Performance of Automotive Hood Frames
This work addresses efficiency challenges for automotive designers in the concept phase, though it is incremental as it applies existing multimodal methods to a specific engineering domain.
The paper tackles the problem of evaluating automotive hood frame performance without time-consuming simulations by developing a multimodal machine learning model that predicts metrics from multiple data modalities, showing it outperforms single-modality approaches and generalizes to unseen geometries.
Is there a way for a designer to evaluate the performance of a given hood frame geometry without spending significant time on simulation setup? This paper seeks to address this challenge by developing a multimodal machine-learning (MMML) architecture that learns from different modalities of the same data to predict performance metrics. It also aims to use the MMML architecture to enhance the efficiency of engineering design processes by reducing reliance on computationally expensive simulations. The proposed architecture accelerates design exploration, enabling rapid iteration while maintaining high-performance standards, especially in the concept design phase. The study also presents results that show that by combining multiple data modalities, MMML outperforms traditional single-modality approaches. Two new frame geometries, not part of the training dataset, are also used for prediction using the trained MMML model to showcase the ability to generalize to unseen frame models. The findings underscore MMML's potential in supplementing traditional simulation-based workflows, particularly in the conceptual design phase, and highlight its role in bridging the gap between machine learning and real-world engineering applications. This research paves the way for the broader adoption of machine learning techniques in engineering design, with a focus on refining multimodal approaches to optimize structural development and accelerate the design cycle.