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Chen Lv

Chen Lv contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

25 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Driver-WM: A Driver-Centric Traffic-Conditioned Latent World Model for In-Cabin Dynamics Rollout

Safe L2/L3 driving automation requires anticipating human-in-the-loop reactions during shared-control transitions. While most driving world models forecast the external environment, in-cabin intelligence remains strictly recognition-oriented and lacks multi-step rollout capabilities for driver dynamics. We introduce Driver-WM, a driver-centric latent world model that rolls out in-cabin dynamics causally conditioned on out-cabin traffic context. This formulation unifies physical kinematics forecasting with auxiliary behavioral and emotional semantic recognition. Operating in a compact latent space constructed from frozen vision-language features, Driver-WM adopts a dual-stream architecture to separately encode external traffic and internal driver states. These streams are directionally coupled via a gated causal injection mechanism, which uses a learned vector gate to modulate external contextual perturbations while strictly enforcing temporal causality. Evaluations on a multi-task assistive driving benchmark demonstrate that Driver-WM yields robust long-horizon geometric forecasting for reactive high-motion maneuvers and improves semantic alignment for both driver and traffic states. Finally, the explicit external-to-internal conditioning allows for controlled test-time interventions to systematically analyze mechanism responses.

preprint2026arXiv

V2X-Radar: A Multi-modal Dataset with 4D Radar for Cooperative Perception

Modern autonomous vehicle perception systems often struggle with occlusions and limited perception range. Previous studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of cooperative perception in extending the perception range and overcoming occlusions, thereby enhancing the safety of autonomous driving. In recent years, a series of cooperative perception datasets have emerged; however, these datasets primarily focus on cameras and LiDAR, neglecting 4D Radar, a sensor used in single-vehicle autonomous driving to provide robust perception in adverse weather conditions. In this paper, to bridge the gap created by the absence of 4D Radar datasets in cooperative perception, we present V2X-Radar, the first large-scale, real-world multi-modal dataset featuring 4D Radar. V2X-Radar dataset is collected using a connected vehicle platform and an intelligent roadside unit equipped with 4D Radar, LiDAR, and multi-view cameras. The collected data encompasses sunny and rainy weather conditions, spanning daytime, dusk, and nighttime, as well as various typical challenging scenarios. The dataset consists of 20K LiDAR frames, 40K camera images, and 20K 4D Radar data, including 350K annotated boxes across five categories. To support various research domains, we have established V2X-Radar-C for cooperative perception, V2X-Radar-I for roadside perception, and V2X-Radar-V for single-vehicle perception. Furthermore, we provide comprehensive benchmarks across these three sub-datasets. We will release all datasets and benchmark codebase at https://huggingface.co/datasets/yanglei18/V2X-Radar and https://github.com/yanglei18/V2X-Radar.

preprint2023arXiv

How Does Traffic Environment Quantitatively Affect the Autonomous Driving Prediction?

An accurate trajectory prediction is crucial for safe and efficient autonomous driving in complex traffic environments. In recent years, artificial intelligence has shown strong capabilities in improving prediction accuracy. However, its characteristics of inexplicability and uncertainty make it challenging to determine the traffic environmental effect on prediction explicitly, posing significant challenges to safety-critical decision-making. To address these challenges, this study proposes a trajectory prediction framework with the epistemic uncertainty estimation ability that outputs high uncertainty when confronting unforeseeable or unknown scenarios. The proposed framework is used to analyze the environmental effect on the prediction algorithm performance. In the analysis, the traffic environment is considered in terms of scenario features and shifts, respectively, where features are divided into kinematic features of a target agent, features of its surrounding traffic participants, and other features. In addition, feature correlation and importance analyses are performed to study the above features' influence on the prediction error and epistemic uncertainty. Further, a cross-dataset case study is conducted using multiple intersection datasets to investigate the impact of unavoidable distributional shifts in the real world on trajectory prediction. The results indicate that the deep ensemble-based method has advantages in improving prediction robustness and estimating epistemic uncertainty. The consistent conclusions are obtained by the feature correlation and importance analyses, including the conclusion that kinematic features of the target agent have relatively strong effects on the prediction error and epistemic uncertainty. Furthermore, the prediction failure caused by distributional shifts and the potential of the deep ensemble-based method are analyzed.

preprint2022arXiv

Brain-Inspired Modelling and Decision-making for Human-Like Autonomous Driving in Mixed Traffic Environment

In this paper, a human-like driving framework is designed for autonomous vehicles (AVs), which aims to make AVs better integrate into the transportation ecology of human driving and eliminate the misunderstanding and incompatibility of human drivers to autonomous driving. Based on the analysis of the real world INTERACTION dataset, a driving aggressiveness estimation model is established with the fuzzy inference approach. Then, a human-like driving model, which integrates the brain emotional learning circuit model (BELCM) with the two-point preview model, is designed. In the human-like lane-change decision-making algorithm, the cost function is designed comprehensively considering driving safety and travel efficiency. Based on the cost function and multi-constraint, the dynamic game algorithm is applied to modelling the interaction and decision making between AV and human driver. Additionally, to guarantee the lane-change safety of AVs, an artificial potential field model is built for collision risk assessment. Finally, the proposed algorithm is evaluated through human-in-the-loop experiments on a driving simulator, and the results demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed method.

preprint2022arXiv

Decision Making for Connected Automated Vehicles at Urban Intersections Considering Social and Individual Benefits

To address the coordination issue of connected automated vehicles (CAVs) at urban scenarios, a game-theoretic decision-making framework is proposed that can advance social benefits, including the traffic system efficiency and safety, as well as the benefits of individual users. Under the proposed decision-making framework, in this work, a representative urban driving scenario, i.e. the unsignalized intersection, is investigated. Once the vehicle enters the focused zone, it will interact with other CAVs and make collaborative decisions. To evaluate the safety risk of surrounding vehicles and reduce the complexity of the decision-making algorithm, the driving risk assessment algorithm is designed with a Gaussian potential field approach. The decision-making cost function is constructed by considering the driving safety and passing efficiency of CAVs. Additionally, decision-making constraints are designed and include safety, comfort, efficiency, control and stability. Based on the cost function and constraints, the fuzzy coalitional game approach is applied to the decision-making issue of CAVs at unsignalized intersections. Two types of fuzzy coalitions are constructed that reflect both individual and social benefits. The benefit allocation in the two types of fuzzy coalitions is associated with the driving aggressiveness of CAVs. Finally, the effectiveness and feasibility of the proposed decision-making framework are verified with three test cases.

preprint2022arXiv

Driving Conflict Resolution of Autonomous Vehicles at Unsignalized Intersections: A Differential Game Approach

Considering personalized driving preferences, a new decision-making framework is developed using a differential game approach to resolve the driving conflicts of autonomous vehicles (AVs) at unsignalized intersections. To realize human-like driving and personalized decision-making, driving aggressiveness is first defined for AVs. To improve driving safety, a Gaussian potential field model is built for collision risk assessment. Besides, in the proposed decision making framework, the collision risk assessment model is further used to reduce the computational complexity based on an event-triggered mechanism. In the construction of payoff function, both driving safety and passing efficiency are comprehensively considered, and the driving aggressiveness is also reflected. Two kinds of equilibrium solution to the differential game, i.e., the Nash equilibrium and Stackelberg equilibrium, are discussed and solved. Finally, the proposed decision making algorithm is tested through a hardware-in-the-loop testing platform, and its feasibility, effectiveness and real-time implementation performance are validated.

preprint2022arXiv

Improved Deep Reinforcement Learning with Expert Demonstrations for Urban Autonomous Driving

Learning-based approaches, such as reinforcement learning (RL) and imitation learning (IL), have indicated superiority over rule-based approaches in complex urban autonomous driving environments, showing great potential to make intelligent decisions. However, current RL and IL approaches still have their own drawbacks, such as low data efficiency for RL and poor generalization capability for IL. In light of this, this paper proposes a novel learning-based method that combines deep reinforcement learning and imitation learning from expert demonstrations, which is applied to longitudinal vehicle motion control in autonomous driving scenarios. Our proposed method employs the soft actor-critic and modifies the learning process of the policy network to incorporate both the goals of maximizing reward and imitating the expert. Moreover, an adaptive prioritized experience replay is designed to sample experience from both the agent's self-exploration and expert demonstration, in order to improve sample efficiency. The proposed method is validated in a simulated urban roundabout scenario and compared with various prevailing RL and IL baselines. The results manifest that the proposed method has a faster training speed, as well as better performance in navigating safely and time-efficiently.

preprint2022arXiv

Multi-task Driver Steering Behaviour Modeling Using Time-Series Transformer

Human intention prediction provides an augmented solution for the design of assistants and collaboration between the human driver and intelligent vehicles. In this study, a multi-task sequential learning framework is developed to predict future steering torques and steering postures based on the upper limb neuromuscular Electromyography (EMG) signals. A single-right-hand driving mode is particularly studied. For this driving mode, three different driving postures are also evaluated. Then, a multi-task time-series transformer network (MTS-Trans) is developed to predict the steering torques and driving postures. To evaluate the multi-task learning performance, four different frameworks are assessed. Twenty-one participants are involved in the driving simulator-based experiment. The proposed model achieved accurate prediction results on the future steering torque prediction and driving postures recognition for single-hand driving modes. The proposed system can contribute to the development of advanced driver steering assistant systems and ensure mutual understanding between human drivers and intelligent vehicles.

preprint2022arXiv

ReCoAt: A Deep Learning-based Framework for Multi-Modal Motion Prediction in Autonomous Driving Application

This paper proposes a novel deep learning framework for multi-modal motion prediction. The framework consists of three parts: recurrent neural networks to process the target agent's motion process, convolutional neural networks to process the rasterized environment representation, and a distance-based attention mechanism to process the interactions among different agents. We validate the proposed framework on a large-scale real-world driving dataset, Waymo open motion dataset, and compare its performance against other methods on the standard testing benchmark. The qualitative results manifest that the predicted trajectories given by our model are accurate, diverse, and in accordance with the road structure. The quantitative results on the standard benchmark reveal that our model outperforms other baseline methods in terms of prediction accuracy and other evaluation metrics. The proposed framework is the second-place winner of the 2021 Waymo open dataset motion prediction challenge.

preprint2022arXiv

RHONN Modelling-enabled Nonlinear Predictive Control for Lateral Dynamics Stabilization of An In-wheel Motor Driven Vehicle

Featuring the fast response and flexibility in control allocation, an electric vehicle with in-wheel motors is a good platform for implementing advanced vehicle dynamics control. Among many active safety functions of an in-wheel motor driven vehicle (IMDV), lateral stability control is a key technology, which can be realized through torque vectoring. To further advance the lateral stabilization performance of the IMDV, in this paper a novel data-driven nonlinear model predictive control (NMPC) is proposed based the recurrent high-order neural network (RHONN) modelling method. First, the new RHONN model is developed to represent vehicle's nonlinear dynamic behaviors. Different from the conventional physics-based modelling method, the RHONN model only needs data and forms high-order polynomials. Based on the RHONN model, the steady-state responses of vehicle's yaw rate and sideslip angle are iteratively optimized and set as the control objectives for low-level controller, aiming to improve the system robustness. Besides, a nonlinear model predictive controller is designed based on the RHONN, which is expected to improve the prediction accuracy during the receding horizon control. Further, a constrained optimization problem is formulated to derive the required yaw moment for vehicle lateral dynamics stabilization. Finally, the performance of the developed RHONN-based nonlinear MPC is validated on an IMDV in the CarSim/Simulink simulation environment. The validation results show that the developed approach outperforms the conventional method, and further improves the stable margin of the system. It is able to enhance the lateral stabilization performance of the IMDV under various driving scenarios, demonstrating the feasibility and effectiveness of the proposed approach.

preprint2022arXiv

Safe Decision-making for Lane-change of Autonomous Vehicles via Human Demonstration-aided Reinforcement Learning

Decision-making is critical for lane change in autonomous driving. Reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms aim to identify the values of behaviors in various situations and thus they become a promising pathway to address the decision-making problem. However, poor runtime safety hinders RL-based decision-making strategies from complex driving tasks in practice. To address this problem, human demonstrations are incorporated into the RL-based decision-making strategy in this paper. Decisions made by human subjects in a driving simulator are treated as safe demonstrations, which are stored into the replay buffer and then utilized to enhance the training process of RL. A complex lane change task in an off-ramp scenario is established to examine the performance of the developed strategy. Simulation results suggest that human demonstrations can effectively improve the safety of decisions of RL. And the proposed strategy surpasses other existing learning-based decision-making strategies with respect to multiple driving performances.

preprint2022arXiv

Sampling Efficient Deep Reinforcement Learning through Preference-Guided Stochastic Exploration

Massive practical works addressed by Deep Q-network (DQN) algorithm have indicated that stochastic policy, despite its simplicity, is the most frequently used exploration approach. However, most existing stochastic exploration approaches either explore new actions heuristically regardless of Q-values or inevitably introduce bias into the learning process to couple the sampling with Q-values. In this paper, we propose a novel preference-guided $ε$-greedy exploration algorithm that can efficiently learn the action distribution in line with the landscape of Q-values for DQN without introducing additional bias. Specifically, we design a dual architecture consisting of two branches, one of which is a copy of DQN, namely the Q-branch. The other branch, which we call the preference branch, learns the action preference that the DQN implicit follows. We theoretically prove that the policy improvement theorem holds for the preference-guided $ε$-greedy policy and experimentally show that the inferred action preference distribution aligns with the landscape of corresponding Q-values. Consequently, preference-guided $ε$-greedy exploration motivates the DQN agent to take diverse actions, i.e., actions with larger Q-values can be sampled more frequently whereas actions with smaller Q-values still have a chance to be explored, thus encouraging the exploration. We assess the proposed method with four well-known DQN variants in nine different environments. Extensive results confirm the superiority of our proposed method in terms of performance and convergence speed. Index Terms- Preference-guided exploration, stochastic policy, data efficiency, deep reinforcement learning, deep Q-learning.

preprint2022arXiv

SIND: A Drone Dataset at Signalized Intersection in China

Intersection is one of the most challenging scenarios for autonomous driving tasks. Due to the complexity and stochasticity, essential applications (e.g., behavior modeling, motion prediction, safety validation, etc.) at intersections rely heavily on data-driven techniques. Thus, there is an intense demand for trajectory datasets of traffic participants (TPs) in intersections. Currently, most intersections in urban areas are equipped with traffic lights. However, there is not yet a large-scale, high-quality, publicly available trajectory dataset for signalized intersections. Therefore, in this paper, a typical two-phase signalized intersection is selected in Tianjin, China. Besides, a pipeline is designed to construct a Signalized INtersection Dataset (SIND), which contains 7 hours of recording including over 13,000 TPs with 7 types. Then, the behaviors of traffic light violations in SIND are recorded. Furthermore, the SIND is also compared with other similar works. The features of the SIND can be summarized as follows: 1) SIND provides more comprehensive information, including traffic light states, motion parameters, High Definition (HD) map, etc. 2) The category of TPs is diverse and characteristic, where the proportion of vulnerable road users (VRUs) is up to 62.6% 3) Multiple traffic light violations of non-motor vehicles are shown. We believe that SIND would be an effective supplement to existing datasets and can promote related research on autonomous driving.The dataset is available online via: https://github.com/SOTIF-AVLab/SinD

preprint2022arXiv

Single UHD Image Dehazing via Interpretable Pyramid Network

Currently, most single image dehazing models cannot run an ultra-high-resolution (UHD) image with a single GPU shader in real-time. To address the problem, we introduce the principle of infinite approximation of Taylor's theorem with the Laplace pyramid pattern to build a model which is capable of handling 4K hazy images in real-time. The N branch networks of the pyramid network correspond to the N constraint terms in Taylor's theorem. Low-order polynomials reconstruct the low-frequency information of the image (e.g. color, illumination). High-order polynomials regress the high-frequency information of the image (e.g. texture). In addition, we propose a Tucker reconstruction-based regularization term that acts on each branch network of the pyramid model. It further constrains the generation of anomalous signals in the feature space. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that our approach can not only run 4K images with haze in real-time on a single GPU (80FPS) but also has unparalleled interpretability. The developed method achieves state-of-the-art (SOTA) performance on two benchmarks (O/I-HAZE) and our updated 4KID dataset while providing the reliable groundwork for subsequent optimization schemes.

preprint2021arXiv

A Secure Sensor Fusion Framework for Connected and Automated Vehicles under Sensor Attacks

By using various sensors to measure the surroundings and sharing local sensor information with the surrounding vehicles through wireless networks, connected and automated vehicles (CAVs) are expected to increase safety, efficiency, and capacity of our transportation systems. However, the increasing usage of sensors has also increased the vulnerability of CAVs to sensor faults and adversarial attacks. Anomalous sensor values resulting from malicious cyberattacks or faulty sensors may cause severe consequences or even fatalities. In this paper, we increase the resilience of CAVs to faults and attacks by using multiple sensors for measuring the same physical variable to create redundancy. We exploit this redundancy and propose a sensor fusion algorithm for providing a robust estimate of the correct sensor information with bounded errors independent of the attack signals, and for attack detection and isolation. The proposed sensor fusion framework is applicable to a large class of security-critical Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs). To minimize the performance degradation resulting from the usage of estimation for control, we provide an $H_{\infty}$ controller for CACC-equipped CAVs capable of stabilizing the closed-loop dynamics of each vehicle in the platoon while reducing the joint effect of estimation errors and communication channel noise on the tracking performance and string behavior of the vehicle platoon. Numerical examples are presented to illustrate the effectiveness of our methods.

preprint2021arXiv

Human-Machine Adaptive Shared Control for Safe Automated Driving under Automation Degradation

In this paper, a human-machine adaptive shared control method is proposed for automated vehicles (AVs) under automation performance degradation. First, a novel risk assessment module is proposed to monitor driving behavior and evaluate automation performance degradation for AVs. Then, an adaptive control authority allocation module is developed. In the event of any performance degradation detection, the allocated control authority of the automation system is decreased based on the assessed risk to reduce the potential risk of vehicle motion. Consequently, the control authority allocated to the human driver is adaptively increased and thus requires more driver engagement in the control loop to compensate for the automation degradation and ensure AV safety. Experimental validation is conducted under different driving scenarios. The testing results show that the proposed approach is able to effectively compensate for the performance degradation of vehicle automation through the human-machine adaptive shared control, ensuring the safety of automated driving

preprint2021arXiv

On Joint Reconstruction of State and Input-Output Injection Attacks for Nonlinear Systems

We address the problem of robust state reconstruction for discrete-time nonlinear systems when the actuators and sensors are injected with (potentially unbounded) attack signals. Exploiting redundancy in sensors and actuators and using a bank of unknown input observers (UIOs), we propose an observer-based estimator capable of providing asymptotic estimates of the system state and attack signals under the condition that the numbers of sensors and actuators under attack are sufficiently small. Using the proposed estimator, we provide methods for isolating the compromised actuators and sensors. Numerical examples are provided to demonstrate the effectiveness of our methods.

preprint2021arXiv

Secure Estimation and Attack Isolation for Connected and Automated Driving in the Presence of Malicious Vehicles

Connected and Automated Vehicles (CAVs) rely on the correctness of position and other vehicle kinematics information to fulfill various driving tasks such as vehicle following, lane change, and collision avoidance. However, a malicious vehicle may send false sensor information to the other vehicles intentionally or unintentionally, which may cause traffic inconvenience or loss of human lives. Here, we take the advantage of cloud-computing and increase the resilience of CAVs to malicious vehicles by assuming each vehicle shares its local sensor information with other vehicles to create information redundancy on the cloud side. We exploit this redundancy and propose a sensor fusion algorithm for the cloud, capable of providing a robust state estimation of all vehicles in the cloud under the condition that the number of malicious information is sufficiently small. Using the proposed estimator, we provide an algorithm for isolating malicious vehicles. We use numerical examples to illustrate the effectiveness of our methods.

preprint2020arXiv

A Unified Multi-scale and Multi-task Learning Framework for Driver Behaviors Reasoning

Mutual understanding between driver and vehicle is critically important to the design of intelligent vehicles and customized interaction interface. In this study, a unified driver behavior reasoning system toward multi-scale and multi-tasks behavior recognition is proposed. Specifically, a multi-scale driver behavior recognition system is designed to recognize both the driver's physical and mental states based on a deep encoder-decoder framework. This system can jointly recognize three driver behaviors with different time scales based on the shared encoder network. Driver body postures and mental behaviors include intention and emotion are studied and identified. The encoder network is designed based on a deep convolutional neural network (CNN), and several decoders for different driver states estimation are proposed with fully connected (FC) and long short-term memory (LSTM) based recurrent neural networks (RNN). The joint feature learning with the CNN encoder increases the computational efficiency and feature diversity, while the customized decoders enable an efficient multi-tasks inference. The proposed framework can be used as a solution to exploit the relationship between different driver states, and it is found that when drivers generate lane change intentions, their emotions usually keep neutral state and more focus on the task. Two naturalistic datasets are used to investigate the model performance, which is a local highway dataset, namely, CranData and one public dataset from Brain4Cars. The testing results on these two datasets show accurate performance and outperform existing methods on driver postures, intention, and emotion recognition.

preprint2020arXiv

An Integrated Framework of Decision Making and Motion Planning for Autonomous Vehicles Considering Social Behaviors

This paper presents a novel integrated approach to deal with the decision making and motion planning for lane-change maneuvers of autonomous vehicle (AV) considering social behaviors of surrounding traffic occupants. Reflected by driving styles and intentions of surrounding vehicles, the social behaviors are taken into consideration during the modelling process. Then, the Stackelberg Game theory is applied to solve the decision-making, which is formulated as a non-cooperative game problem. Besides, potential field is adopted in the motion planning model, which uses different potential functions to describe surrounding vehicles with different behaviors and road constrains. Then, Model Predictive Control (MPC) is utilized to predict the state and trajectory of the autonomous vehicle. Finally, the decision-making and motion planning is then integrated into a constrained multi-objective optimization problem. Three testing scenarios considering different social behaviors of surrounding vehicles are carried out to validate the performance of the proposed approach. Testing results show that the integrated approach is able to address different social interactions with other traffic participants, and make proper and safe decisions and planning for autonomous vehicles, demonstrating its feasibility and effectiveness.

preprint2020arXiv

Deep Convolutional Neural Network-based Bernoulli Heatmap for Head Pose Estimation

Head pose estimation is a crucial problem for many tasks, such as driver attention, fatigue detection, and human behaviour analysis. It is well known that neural networks are better at handling classification problems than regression problems. It is an extremely nonlinear process to let the network output the angle value directly for optimization learning, and the weight constraint of the loss function will be relatively weak. This paper proposes a novel Bernoulli heatmap for head pose estimation from a single RGB image. Our method can achieve the positioning of the head area while estimating the angles of the head. The Bernoulli heatmap makes it possible to construct fully convolutional neural networks without fully connected layers and provides a new idea for the output form of head pose estimation. A deep convolutional neural network (CNN) structure with multiscale representations is adopted to maintain high-resolution information and low-resolution information in parallel. This kind of structure can maintain rich, high-resolution representations. In addition, channelwise fusion is adopted to make the fusion weights learnable instead of simple addition with equal weights. As a result, the estimation is spatially more precise and potentially more accurate. The effectiveness of the proposed method is empirically demonstrated by comparing it with other state-of-the-art methods on public datasets.

preprint2020arXiv

Human-Machine Collaboration for Automated Vehicles via an Intelligent Two-Phase Haptic Interface

Prior to realizing fully autonomous driving, human intervention will be required periodically to guarantee vehicle safety. This fact poses a new challenge in human-machine interaction, particularly during control authority transition from the automated functionality to a human driver. This paper addresses this challenge by proposing an intelligent haptic interface based on a newly developed two-phase human-machine interaction model. The intelligent haptic torque is applied on the steering wheel and switches its functionality between predictive guidance and haptic assistance according to the varying state and control ability of human drivers, helping drivers gradually resume manual control during takeover. The developed approach is validated by conducting vehicle experiments with 26 human participants. The results suggest that the proposed method can effectively enhance the driving state recovery and control performance of human drivers during takeover compared with an existing approach, further improving the safety and smoothness of the human-machine interaction in automated vehicles.

preprint2020arXiv

Interaction-Aware Trajectory Prediction of Connected Vehicles using CNN-LSTM Networks

Predicting the future trajectory of a surrounding vehicle in congested traffic is one of the basic abilities of an autonomous vehicle. In congestion, a vehicle's future movement is the result of its interaction with surrounding vehicles. A vehicle in congestion may have many neighbors in a relatively short distance, while only a small part of neighbors affect its future trajectory mostly. In this work, An interaction-aware method which predicts the future trajectory of an ego vehicle considering its interaction with eight surrounding vehicles is proposed. The dynamics of vehicles are encoded by LSTMs with shared weights, and the interaction is extracted with a simple CNN. The proposed model is trained and tested on trajectories extracted from the publicly accessible NGSIM US-101 dataset. Quantitative experimental results show that the proposed model outperforms previous models in terms of root-mean-square error (RMSE). Results visualization shows that the model is able to predict future trajectory induced by lane change before the vehicle operate obvious lateral movement to initiate lane changing.

preprint2020arXiv

Multi-modal Sensor Fusion-Based Deep Neural Network for End-to-end Autonomous Driving with Scene Understanding

This study aims to improve the performance and generalization capability of end-to-end autonomous driving with scene understanding leveraging deep learning and multimodal sensor fusion techniques. The designed end-to-end deep neural network takes as input the visual image and associated depth information in an early fusion level and outputs the pixel-wise semantic segmentation as scene understanding and vehicle control commands concurrently. The end-to-end deep learning-based autonomous driving model is tested in high-fidelity simulated urban driving conditions and compared with the benchmark of CoRL2017 and NoCrash. The testing results show that the proposed approach is of better performance and generalization ability, achieving a 100% success rate in static navigation tasks in both training and unobserved situations, as well as better success rates in other tasks than the prior models. A further ablation study shows that the model with the removal of multimodal sensor fusion or scene understanding pales in the new environment because of the false perception. The results verify that the performance of our model is improved by the synergy of multimodal sensor fusion with scene understanding subtask, demonstrating the feasibility and effectiveness of the developed deep neural network with multimodal sensor fusion.

preprint2019arXiv

Universal transfer and stacking technique of van der Waals heterostructures for spintronics

The key to achieving high-quality van der Waals heterostructure devices made from various two-dimensional (2D) materials lies in the control over clean and flexible interfaces. However, existing transfer methods based on different mediators possess insufficiencies including the presence of residues, the unavailability of flexible interface engineering, and the selectivity towards materials and substrates since their adhesions differ considerably with the various preparation conditions, from chemical vapor deposition (CVD) growth to mechanical exfoliation. In this paper, we introduce a more universal method using a prefabricated polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film to transfer and stack 2D materials, whether they are prepared by CVD or exfoliation. This peel-off and drop-off technique promises an ideal interface of the materials without introducing contamination. In addition, the method exhibits a micron-scale spatial transfer accuracy and meets special experimental conditions such as the preparation of twisted graphene and the 2D/metal heterostructure construction. We illustrate the superiority of this method with a WSe2 vertical spin valve device, whose performance verifies the applicability and advantages of such a method for spintronics. Our PVA-assisted transfer process will promote the development of high-performance 2D-material-based devices.