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Cyber Mobility Mirror: A Deep Learning-based Real-World Object Perception Platform Using Roadside LiDAR

Authors :
Bai, Zhengwei
Nayak, Saswat Priyadarshi
Zhao, Xuanpeng
Wu, Guoyuan
Barth, Matthew J.
Qi, Xuewei
Liu, Yongkang
Sisbot, Emrah Akin
Oguchi, Kentaro
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Object perception plays a fundamental role in Cooperative Driving Automation (CDA) which is regarded as a revolutionary promoter for the next-generation transportation systems. However, the vehicle-based perception may suffer from the limited sensing range and occlusion as well as low penetration rates in connectivity. In this paper, we propose Cyber Mobility Mirror (CMM), a next-generation real-time traffic surveillance system for 3D object perception and reconstruction, to explore the potential of roadside sensors for enabling CDA in the real world. The CMM system consists of six main components: 1) the data pre-processor to retrieve and preprocess the raw data; 2) the roadside 3D object detector to generate 3D detection results; 3) the multi-object tracker to identify detected objects; 4) the global locator to map positioning information from the LiDAR coordinate to geographic coordinate using coordinate transformation; 5) the cloud-based communicator to transmit perception information from roadside sensors to equipped vehicles, and 6) the onboard advisor to reconstruct and display the real-time traffic conditions via Graphical User Interface (GUI). In this study, a field-operational system is deployed at a real-world intersection, University Avenue and Iowa Avenue in Riverside, California to assess the feasibility and performance of our CMM system. Results from field tests demonstrate that our CMM prototype system can provide satisfactory perception performance with 96.99% precision and 83.62% recall. High-fidelity real-time traffic conditions (at the object level) can be geo-localized with an average error of 0.14m and displayed on the GUI of the equipped vehicle with a frequency of 3-4 Hz.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2202.13505
Document Type :
Working Paper