Matching Items (4)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

151851-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
In this thesis we deal with the problem of temporal logic robustness estimation. We present a dynamic programming algorithm for the robust estimation problem of Metric Temporal Logic (MTL) formulas regarding a finite trace of time stated sequence. This algorithm not only tests if the MTL specification is satisfied by

In this thesis we deal with the problem of temporal logic robustness estimation. We present a dynamic programming algorithm for the robust estimation problem of Metric Temporal Logic (MTL) formulas regarding a finite trace of time stated sequence. This algorithm not only tests if the MTL specification is satisfied by the given input which is a finite system trajectory, but also quantifies to what extend does the sequence satisfies or violates the MTL specification. The implementation of the algorithm is the DP-TALIRO toolbox for MATLAB. Currently it is used as the temporal logic robust computing engine of S-TALIRO which is a tool for MATLAB searching for trajectories of minimal robustness in Simulink/ Stateflow. DP-TALIRO is expected to have near linear running time and constant memory requirement depending on the structure of the MTL formula. DP-TALIRO toolbox also integrates new features not supported in its ancestor FW-TALIRO such as parameter replacement, most related iteration and most related predicate. A derivative of DP-TALIRO which is DP-T-TALIRO is also addressed in this thesis which applies dynamic programming algorithm for time robustness computation. We test the running time of DP-TALIRO and compare it with FW-TALIRO. Finally, we present an application where DP-TALIRO is used as the robustness computation core of S-TALIRO for a parameter estimation problem.
ContributorsYang, Hengyi (Author) / Fainekos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Sarjoughian, Hessam S. (Committee member) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
157060-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Automated driving systems are in an intensive research and development stage, and the companies developing these systems are targeting to deploy them on public roads in a very near future. Guaranteeing safe operation of these systems is crucial as they are planned to carry passengers and share the road with

Automated driving systems are in an intensive research and development stage, and the companies developing these systems are targeting to deploy them on public roads in a very near future. Guaranteeing safe operation of these systems is crucial as they are planned to carry passengers and share the road with other vehicles and pedestrians. Yet, there is no agreed-upon approach on how and in what detail those systems should be tested. Different organizations have different testing approaches, and one common approach is to combine simulation-based testing with real-world driving.

One of the expectations from fully-automated vehicles is never to cause an accident. However, an automated vehicle may not be able to avoid all collisions, e.g., the collisions caused by other road occupants. Hence, it is important for the system designers to understand the boundary case scenarios where an autonomous vehicle can no longer avoid a collision. Besides safety, there are other expectations from automated vehicles such as comfortable driving and minimal fuel consumption. All safety and functional expectations from an automated driving system should be captured with a set of system requirements. It is challenging to create requirements that are unambiguous and usable for the design, testing, and evaluation of automated driving systems. Another challenge is to define useful metrics for assessing the testing quality because in general, it is impossible to test every possible scenario.

The goal of this dissertation is to formalize the theory for testing automated vehicles. Various methods for automatic test generation for automated-driving systems in simulation environments are presented and compared. The contributions presented in this dissertation include (i) new metrics that can be used to discover the boundary cases between safe and unsafe driving conditions, (ii) a new approach that combines combinatorial testing and optimization-guided test generation methods, (iii) approaches that utilize global optimization methods and random exploration to generate critical vehicle and pedestrian trajectories for testing purposes, (iv) a publicly-available simulation-based automated vehicle testing framework that enables application of the existing testing approaches in the literature, including the new approaches presented in this dissertation.
ContributorsTuncali, Cumhur Erkan (Author) / Fainekos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Ben Amor, Heni (Committee member) / Kapinski, James (Committee member) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
187599-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
5G Millimeter Wave (mmWave) technology holds great promise for Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) due to its ability to achieve data rates in the Gbps range. However, mmWave suffers high beamforming overhead and requirement of line of sight (LOS) to maintain a strong connection. For Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) scenarios, where CAVs connect

5G Millimeter Wave (mmWave) technology holds great promise for Connected Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) due to its ability to achieve data rates in the Gbps range. However, mmWave suffers high beamforming overhead and requirement of line of sight (LOS) to maintain a strong connection. For Vehicle-to-Infrastructure (V2I) scenarios, where CAVs connect to roadside units (RSUs), these drawbacks become apparent. Because vehicles are dynamic, there is a large potential for link blockages, which in turn is detrimental to the connected applications running on the vehicle, such as cooperative perception and remote driver takeover. Existing RSU selection schemes base their decisions on signal strength and vehicle trajectory alone, which is not enough to prevent the blockage of links. Most recent CAVs motion planning algorithms routinely use other vehicle's near-future plans, either by explicit communication among vehicles, or by prediction. In this thesis, I make use of this knowledge (of the other vehicle's near future path plans) to further improve the RSU association mechanism for CAVs. I solve the RSU association problem by converting it to a shortest path problem with the objective to maximize the total communication bandwidth. Evaluations of B-AWARE in simulation using Simulated Urban Mobility (SUMO) and Digital twin for self-dRiving Intelligent VEhicles (DRIVE) on 12 highway and city street scenarios with varying traffic density and RSU placements show that B-AWARE results in a 1.05x improvement of the potential datarate in the average case and 1.28x in the best case vs. the state of the art. But more impressively, B-AWARE reduces the time spent with no connection by 48% in the average case and 251% in the best case as compared to the state-of-the-art methods. This is partly a result of B-AWARE reducing almost 100% of blockage occurrences in simulation.
ContributorsSzeto, Matthew (Author) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Thesis advisor) / LiKamWa, Robert (Committee member) / Meuth, Ryan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
161988-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Autonomous Vehicles (AV) are inevitable entities in future mobility systems thatdemand safety and adaptability as two critical factors in replacing/assisting human drivers. Safety arises in defining, standardizing, quantifying, and monitoring requirements for all autonomous components. Adaptability, on the other hand, involves efficient handling of uncertainty and inconsistencies in models and data. First, I

Autonomous Vehicles (AV) are inevitable entities in future mobility systems thatdemand safety and adaptability as two critical factors in replacing/assisting human drivers. Safety arises in defining, standardizing, quantifying, and monitoring requirements for all autonomous components. Adaptability, on the other hand, involves efficient handling of uncertainty and inconsistencies in models and data. First, I address safety by presenting a search-based test-case generation framework that can be used in training and testing deep-learning components of AV. Next, to address adaptability, I propose a framework based on multi-valued linear temporal logic syntax and semantics that allows autonomous agents to perform model-checking on systems with uncertainties. The search-based test-case generation framework provides safety assurance guarantees through formalizing and monitoring Responsibility Sensitive Safety (RSS) rules. I use the RSS rules in signal temporal logic as qualification specifications for monitoring and screening the quality of generated test-drive scenarios. Furthermore, to extend the existing temporal-based formal languages’ expressivity, I propose a new spatio-temporal perception logic that enables formalizing qualification specifications for perception systems. All-in-one, my test-generation framework can be used for reasoning about the quality of perception, prediction, and decision-making components in AV. Finally, my efforts resulted in publicly available software. One is an offline monitoring algorithm based on the proposed logic to reason about the quality of perception systems. The other is an optimal planner (model checker) that accepts mission specifications and model descriptions in the form of multi-valued logic and multi-valued sets, respectively. My monitoring framework is distributed with the publicly available S-TaLiRo and Sim-ATAV tools.
ContributorsHekmatnejad, Mohammad (Author) / Fainekos, Georgios (Thesis advisor) / Deshmukh, Jyotirmoy V (Committee member) / Karam, Lina (Committee member) / Pedrielli, Giulia (Committee member) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Committee member) / Yang, Yezhou (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021