Enhancing the Performance of a Safe Controller Via Supervised Learning for Truck Lateral Control
Abstract
Correct-by-construction techniques, such as control barrier functions (CBFs), can be used to guarantee closed-loop safety by acting as a supervisor of an existing legacy controller. However, supervisory-control intervention typically compromises the performance of the closed-loop system. On the other hand, machine learning has been used to synthesize controllers that inherit good properties from a training dataset, though safety is typically not guaranteed due to the difficulty of analyzing the associated learning structure. In this paper, supervised learning is combined with CBFs to synthesize controllers that enjoy good performance with provable safety. A training set is generated by trajectory optimization that incorporates the CBF constraint for an interesting range of initial conditions of the truck model. A control policy is obtained via supervised learning that maps a feature representing the initial conditions to a parameterized desired trajectory. The learning-based controller is used as the performance controller and a CBF-based supervisory controller guarantees safety. A case study of lane keeping (LK) for articulated trucks shows that the controller trained by supervised learning inherits the good performance of the training set and rarely requires intervention by the CBF supervisor.
Additional Information
© 2019 by ASME. Manuscript received August 23, 2018; final manuscript received April 3, 2019; published online June 3, 2019. The work of Yuxiao Chen, A. Hereid, and Huei Peng is supported by NSF Grant CNS-1239037. The work of J. Grizzle is supported by Toyota Research Institute (TRI). Funding Data: National Science Foundation (Grant No. CNS-1239037; Funder ID: 10.13039/501100008982). Toyota Research Institute (TRI) (Funder ID: 10.13039/501100004405).Attached Files
Published - ds_141_10_101005.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 98879
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20190926-133052511
- NSF
- CNS-1239037
- Toyota Research Institute
- Created
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2019-09-26Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-16Created from EPrint's last_modified field