07 Jul 2021

Human-Machine Shared Driving Control for Semi-Autonomous Vehicles Using Level of Cooperativeness


Authors :- Anh-Tu Nguyen, Jagat Jyoti Rath, Chen Lv, Thierry-Marie Guerra and Jimmy Lauber
Publication :- Sensors, July 2021, 21(14), 4647.

This paper proposes a new haptic shared control concept between the human driver and the automation for lane keeping in semi-autonomous vehicles. Based on the principle of human-machine interaction during lane keeping, the level of cooperativeness for completion of driving task is introduced. Using the proposed human-machine cooperative status along with the driver workload, the required level of haptic authority is determined according to the driver’s performance characteristics. Then, a time-varying assistance factor is developed to modulate the assistance torque, which is designed from an integrated driver-in-the-loop vehicle model taking into account the yaw-slip dynamics, the steering dynamics, and the human driver dynamics. To deal with the time-varying nature of both the assistance factor and the vehicle speed involved in the driver-in-the-loop vehicle model, a new ℓ∞ linear parameter varying control technique is proposed. The predefined specifications of the driver-vehicle system are guaranteed using Lyapunov stability theory. The proposed haptic shared control method is validated under various driving tests conducted with high-fidelity simulations. Extensive performance evaluations are performed to highlight the effectiveness of the new method in terms of driver-automation conflict management.

DOI Link :- https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/21/14/4647