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Published October 29, 2019 | Submitted
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Voluntary lane-change policy synthesis with reactive control improvisation

Abstract

In this paper, we propose reactive control improvisation to synthesize voluntary lane-change policy that meets human preferences under given traffic environments. We first train Markov models to describe traffic patterns and the motion of vehicles responding to such patterns using traffic data. The trained parameters are calibrated using control improvisation to ensure the traffic scenario assumptions are satisfied. Based on the traffic pattern, vehicle response models, and Bayesian switching rules, the lane-change environment for an automated vehicle is modeled as a Markov decision process. Based on human lane-change behaviors, we train a voluntary lane-change policy using explicit-duration Markov decision process. Parameters in the lane-change policy are calibrated through reactive control improvisation to allow an automated car to pursue faster speed while maintaining desired frequency of lane-change maneuvers in various traffic environments.

Additional Information

To appear, 2018 Conference on Decision and Control (CDC). This work is supported by NSF VeHiCal project 1545126. The authors would like to thank the support from NSF CPS Frontier project 1545126, and thank the insightful discussions with Prof. Sanjit Seshia and Prof. Gabor Orosz.

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Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 18, 2023