Do you want to publish a course? Click here

V2I Connectivity-Based Dynamic Queue-Jump Lane for Emergency Vehicles: A Deep Reinforcement Learning Approach

208   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 Added by Haoran Su
 Publication date 2020
and research's language is English




Ask ChatGPT about the research

Emergency vehicle (EMV) service is a key function of cities and is exceedingly challenging due to urban traffic congestion. A main reason behind EMV service delay is the lack of communication and cooperation between vehicles blocking EMVs. In this paper, we study the improvement of EMV service under V2I connectivity. We consider the establishment of dynamic queue jump lanes (DQJLs) based on real-time coordination of connected vehicles. We develop a novel Markov decision process formulation for the DQJL problem, which explicitly accounts for the uncertainty of drivers reaction to approaching EMVs. We propose a deep neural network-based reinforcement learning algorithm that efficiently computes the optimal coordination instructions. We also validate our approach on a micro-simulation testbed using Simulation of Urban Mobility (SUMO). Validation results show that with our proposed methodology, the centralized control system saves approximately 15% EMV passing time than the benchmark system.



rate research

Read More

This paper aims to examine the potential of using the emerging deep reinforcement learning techniques in flight control. Instead of learning from scratch, we suggest to leverage domain knowledge available in learning to improve learning efficiency and generalisability. More specifically, the proposed approach fixes the autopilot structure as typical three-loop autopilot and deep reinforcement learning is utilised to learn the autopilot gains. To solve the flight control problem, we then formulate a Markovian decision process with a proper reward function that enable the application of reinforcement learning theory. Another type of domain knowledge is exploited for defining the reward function, by shaping reference inputs in consideration of important control objectives and using the shaped reference inputs in the reward function. The state-of-the-art deep deterministic policy gradient algorithm is utilised to learn an action policy that maps the observed states to the autopilot gains. Extensive empirical numerical simulations are performed to validate the proposed computational control algorithm.
Increasing the response time of emergency vehicles(EVs) could lead to an immeasurable loss of property and life. On this account, tactical decision making for EVs microscopic control remains an indispensable issue to be improved. In this paper, a rule-based avoiding strategy(AS) is devised, that CVs in the prioritized zone ahead of EV should accelerate or change their lane to avoid it. Besides, a novel DQN method with speed-adaptive compact state space (SC-DQN) is put forward to fit in EVs high-speed feature and generalize in various road topologies. Afterward, the execution of AS feedback to the input of SC-DQN so that they joint organically as a combinational method. The following approach reveals that DRL could complement rule-based avoiding strategy in generalization, and on the contrary, the rule-based avoiding strategy could complement DRL in stability, and their combination could lead to less response time, lower collision rate and smoother trajectory.
128 - Yufei Ye , Xiaoqin Ren , Jin Wang 2018
With the rapid development of deep learning, deep reinforcement learning (DRL) began to appear in the field of resource scheduling in recent years. Based on the previous research on DRL in the literature, we introduce online resource scheduling algorithm DeepRM2 and the offline resource scheduling algorithm DeepRM_Off. Compared with the state-of-the-art DRL algorithm DeepRM and heuristic algorithms, our proposed algorithms have faster convergence speed and better scheduling efficiency with regarding to average slowdown time, job completion time and rewards.
192 - Teng Liu , Bing Huang , Xingyu Mu 2020
Deep reinforcement learning (DRL) is becoming a prevalent and powerful methodology to address the artificial intelligent problems. Owing to its tremendous potentials in self-learning and self-improvement, DRL is broadly serviced in many research fields. This article conducted a comprehensive comparison of multiple DRL approaches on the freeway decision-making problem for autonomous vehicles. These techniques include the common deep Q learning (DQL), double DQL (DDQL), dueling DQL, and prioritized replay DQL. First, the reinforcement learning (RL) framework is introduced. As an extension, the implementations of the above mentioned DRL methods are established mathematically. Then, the freeway driving scenario for the automated vehicles is constructed, wherein the decision-making problem is transferred as a control optimization problem. Finally, a series of simulation experiments are achieved to evaluate the control performance of these DRL-enabled decision-making strategies. A comparative analysis is realized to connect the autonomous driving results with the learning characteristics of these DRL techniques.
114 - Fei Ye , Pin Wang , Ching-Yao Chan 2020
Recent advances in supervised learning and reinforcement learning have provided new opportunities to apply related methodologies to automated driving. However, there are still challenges to achieve automated driving maneuvers in dynamically changing environments. Supervised learning algorithms such as imitation learning can generalize to new environments by training on a large amount of labeled data, however, it can be often impractical or cost-prohibitive to obtain sufficient data for each new environment. Although reinforcement learning methods can mitigate this data-dependency issue by training the agent in a trial-and-error way, they still need to re-train policies from scratch when adapting to new environments. In this paper, we thus propose a meta reinforcement learning (MRL) method to improve the agents generalization capabilities to make automated lane-changing maneuvers at different traffic environments, which are formulated as different traffic congestion levels. Specifically, we train the model at light to moderate traffic densities and test it at a new heavy traffic density condition. We use both collision rate and success rate to quantify the safety and effectiveness of the proposed model. A benchmark model is developed based on a pretraining method, which uses the same network structure and training tasks as our proposed model for fair comparison. The simulation results shows that the proposed method achieves an overall success rate up to 20% higher than the benchmark model when it is generalized to the new environment of heavy traffic density. The collision rate is also reduced by up to 18% than the benchmark model. Finally, the proposed model shows more stable and efficient generalization capabilities adapting to the new environment, and it can achieve 100% successful rate and 0% collision rate with only a few steps of gradient updates.

suggested questions

comments
Fetching comments Fetching comments
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا