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Autori principali: Wang, Zihan, Li, Mengran, Zhang, Ronghui, Zhao, Jing, Hu, Chuan, Ma, Xiaolei, Qiu, Zhijun
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2024
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18007
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author Wang, Zihan
Li, Mengran
Zhang, Ronghui
Zhao, Jing
Hu, Chuan
Ma, Xiaolei
Qiu, Zhijun
author_facet Wang, Zihan
Li, Mengran
Zhang, Ronghui
Zhao, Jing
Hu, Chuan
Ma, Xiaolei
Qiu, Zhijun
contents With the development of intelligent connected vehicle technology, human-machine shared control has gained popularity in vehicle following due to its effectiveness in driver assistance. However, traditional vehicle following systems struggle to maintain stability when driver reaction time fluctuates, as these variations require different levels of system intervention. To address this issue, the proposed human-machine shared vehicle following assistance system (HM-VFAS) integrates driver outputs under various states with the assistance system. The system employs an intelligent driver model that accounts for reaction time delays, simulating time-varying driver outputs. A control authority allocation strategy is designed to dynamically adjust the level of intervention based on real-time driver state assessment. To handle instability from driver authority switching, the proposed solution includes a two-layer adaptive finite time sliding mode controller (A-FTSMC). The first layer is an integral sliding mode adaptive controller that ensures robustness by compensating for uncertainties in the driver output. The second layer is a fast non-singular terminal sliding mode controller designed to accelerate convergence for rapid stabilization. Using real driver videos as inputs, the performance of the HM-VFAS was evaluated. Results show that the proposed control strategy maintains a safe distance under time-varying driver states, with the actual acceleration error relative to the target acceleration maintained within 0.5m/s~2 and the maximum acceleration error reduced by 1.2m/s~2. Compared to traditional controllers, the A-FTSMC controller offers faster convergence and less vibration, reducing the stabilization time by 27.3%.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_18007
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Effective Finite Time Stability Control for Human-Machine Shared Vehicle Following System
Wang, Zihan
Li, Mengran
Zhang, Ronghui
Zhao, Jing
Hu, Chuan
Ma, Xiaolei
Qiu, Zhijun
Systems and Control
With the development of intelligent connected vehicle technology, human-machine shared control has gained popularity in vehicle following due to its effectiveness in driver assistance. However, traditional vehicle following systems struggle to maintain stability when driver reaction time fluctuates, as these variations require different levels of system intervention. To address this issue, the proposed human-machine shared vehicle following assistance system (HM-VFAS) integrates driver outputs under various states with the assistance system. The system employs an intelligent driver model that accounts for reaction time delays, simulating time-varying driver outputs. A control authority allocation strategy is designed to dynamically adjust the level of intervention based on real-time driver state assessment. To handle instability from driver authority switching, the proposed solution includes a two-layer adaptive finite time sliding mode controller (A-FTSMC). The first layer is an integral sliding mode adaptive controller that ensures robustness by compensating for uncertainties in the driver output. The second layer is a fast non-singular terminal sliding mode controller designed to accelerate convergence for rapid stabilization. Using real driver videos as inputs, the performance of the HM-VFAS was evaluated. Results show that the proposed control strategy maintains a safe distance under time-varying driver states, with the actual acceleration error relative to the target acceleration maintained within 0.5m/s~2 and the maximum acceleration error reduced by 1.2m/s~2. Compared to traditional controllers, the A-FTSMC controller offers faster convergence and less vibration, reducing the stabilization time by 27.3%.
title Effective Finite Time Stability Control for Human-Machine Shared Vehicle Following System
topic Systems and Control
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.18007