4.7 Article

EPSILON: An Efficient Planning System for Automated Vehicles in Highly Interactive Environments

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON ROBOTICS
Volume 38, Issue 2, Pages 1118-1138

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TRO.2021.3104254

Keywords

Planning; Trajectory; Semantics; Uncertainty; Autonomous vehicles; Predictive models; Decision making; Autonomous vehicle navigation; decision-making for automated driving; intelligent transportation systems; motion and path planning

Categories

Funding

  1. Hong Kong Ph.D. Fellowship Scheme
  2. HKUST-DJI Joint Innovation Laboratory
  3. HKUST Institutional Fund

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EPSILON is an efficient interaction-aware planning system for automated driving, with a hierarchical structure that achieves human-like driving behaviors in highly interactive traffic flow smoothly and safely without being overconservative compared to existing planning methods.
In this article, we present an efficient planning system for automated vehicles in highly interactive environments (EPSILON). EPSILON is an efficient interaction-aware planning system for automated driving, and is extensively validated in both simulation and real-world dense city traffic. It follows a hierarchical structure with an interactive behavior planning layer and an optimization-based motion planning layer. The behavior planning is formulated from a partially observable Markov decision process (POMDP), but is much more efficient than naively applying a POMDP to the decision-making problem. The key to efficiency is guided branching in both the action space and observation space, which decomposes the original problem into a limited number of closed-loop policy evaluations. Moreover, we introduce a new driver model with a safety mechanism to overcome the risk induced by the potential imperfectness of prior knowledge. For motion planning, we employ a spatio-temporal semantic corridor (SSC) to model the constraints posed by complex driving environments in a unified way. Based on the SSC, a safe and smooth trajectory is optimized, complying with the decision provided by the behavior planner. We validate our planning system in both simulations and real-world dense traffic, and the experimental results show that our EPSILON achieves human-like driving behaviors in highly interactive traffic flow smoothly and safely without being overconservative compared to the existing planning methods.

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