LDIPRS: A novel longitudinal driving intention prior recognition technique empowered by TENG and deep learning

Haiqiu Tan, Dongxian Sun, Hongwei Guo*, Yuhan Wang, Jian Shi, Haodong Zhang, Wuhong Wang, Fanqing Zhang, Ming Gao

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

For autonomous vehicles, real-time and accurate longitudinal driving intention recognition is crucial as it effectively enhances driving safety and improves the driving experience. This study proposes a novel data and model hybrid-driven fine-grained longitudinal driving intention prior recognition system (LDIPRS). Firstly, the system integrates a human-pedal interaction sensor (HPIS) based on triboelectric nanogenerators for fine-grained longitudinal driving maneuver monitoring and the channel attention (CA)-enhanced convolutional neural network (CBRCNet). The HPIS, integrated into the vehicle's acceleration and brake pedals, is capable of monitoring driver foot movement information in the form of electrical signals before the vehicle responds, achieving data level advance. The collected electrical signals are fed into the CBRCNet network, which models and learns the mapping relationship between these signals and fine-grained longitudinal driving intentions, leading to model level advances. The HPIS completes the capture of longitudinal maneuver information 541 ms before the driving simulator starts to respond at the data level. At the model level, CBRCNet can achieve a recognition accuracy of 96.1 % based on partial response data (50 ms after starting response) rather than complete response data of the HPIS. Finally, our proposed LDIPRS realizes the recognition of emergency braking, rapid acceleration, normal braking, and normal acceleration in advance by 732 ms, 1035 ms, 1757 ms, and 2227 ms, respectively. This study introduces self-powered, low-cost, highly sensitive triboelectric sensors into the field of intention recognition, and combines the triboelectric sensors with deep learning algorithms to offer a promising solution to improve the safety of autonomous vehicles and the efficiency of intelligent transportation systems.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110087
JournalNano Energy
Volume129
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Autonomous vehicles
  • Driving intention recognition
  • Human-machine interaction
  • Prior recognition system
  • Triboelectric nanogenerators

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