Matching Items (52)
Description
Autonomous Driving (AD) systems are being researched and developed actively in recent days to solve the task of controlling the vehicles safely without human intervention. One method to solve such task is through deep Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach. In deep RL, the main objective is to find an optimal control

Autonomous Driving (AD) systems are being researched and developed actively in recent days to solve the task of controlling the vehicles safely without human intervention. One method to solve such task is through deep Reinforcement Learning (RL) approach. In deep RL, the main objective is to find an optimal control behavior, often called policy performed by an agent, which is AD system in this case. This policy is usually learned through Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) based on the observations that the agent perceives along with rewards feedback received from environment.However, recent studies demonstrated the vulnerability of such control policies learned through deep RL against adversarial attacks. This raises concerns about the application of such policies to risk-sensitive tasks like AD. Previous adversarial attacks assume that the threats can be broadly realized in two ways: First one is targeted attacks through manipu- lation of the agent’s complete observation in real time and the other is untargeted attacks through manipulation of objects in environment. The former assumes full access to the agent’s observations at almost all time, while the latter has no control over outcomes of attack. This research investigates the feasibility of targeted attacks through physical adver- sarial objects in the environment, a threat that combines the effectiveness and practicality. Through simulations on one of the popular AD systems, it is demonstrated that a fixed optimal policy can be malfunctioned over time by an attacker e.g., performing an unintended self-parking, when an adversarial object is present. The proposed approach is formulated in such a way that the attacker can learn a dynamics of the environment and also utilizes common knowledge of agent’s dynamics to realize the attack. Further, several experiments are conducted to show the effectiveness of the proposed attack on different driving scenarios empirically. Lastly, this work also studies robustness of object location, and trade-off between the attack strength and attack length based on proposed evaluation metrics.
ContributorsBuddareddygari, Prasanth (Author) / Yang, Yezhou (Thesis advisor) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Fainekos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
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Description
Pipeline infrastructure forms a vital aspect of the United States economy and standard of living. A majority of the current pipeline systems were installed in the early 1900’s and often lack a reliable database reporting the mechanical properties, and information about manufacturing and installation, thereby raising a concern for their

Pipeline infrastructure forms a vital aspect of the United States economy and standard of living. A majority of the current pipeline systems were installed in the early 1900’s and often lack a reliable database reporting the mechanical properties, and information about manufacturing and installation, thereby raising a concern for their safety and integrity. Testing for the aging pipe strength and toughness estimation without interrupting the transmission and operations thus becomes important. The state-of-the-art techniques tend to focus on the single modality deterministic estimation of pipe strength and do not account for inhomogeneity and uncertainties, many others appear to rely on destructive means. These gaps provide an impetus for novel methods to better characterize the pipe material properties. The focus of this study is the design of a Bayesian Network information fusion model for the prediction of accurate probabilistic pipe strength and consequently the maximum allowable operating pressure. A multimodal diagnosis is performed by assessing the mechanical property variation within the pipe in terms of material property measurements, such as microstructure, composition, hardness and other mechanical properties through experimental analysis, which are then integrated with the Bayesian network model that uses a Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm. Prototype testing is carried out for model verification, validation and demonstration and data training of the model is employed to obtain a more accurate measure of the probabilistic pipe strength. With a view of providing a holistic measure of material performance in service, the fatigue properties of the pipe steel are investigated. The variation in the fatigue crack growth rate (da/dN) along the direction of the pipe wall thickness is studied in relation to the microstructure and the material constants for the crack growth have been reported. A combination of imaging and composition analysis is incorporated to study the fracture surface of the fatigue specimen. Finally, some well-known statistical inference models are employed for prediction of manufacturing process parameters for steel pipelines. The adaptability of the small datasets for the accuracy of the prediction outcomes is discussed and the models are compared for their performance.
ContributorsDahire, Sonam (Author) / Liu, Yongming (Thesis advisor) / Jiao, Yang (Committee member) / Ren, Yi (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018