An Empirical Analysis of the Use of Real-Time Reachability for the Safety Assurance of Autonomous Vehicles
Recent advances in machine learning technologies and sensing have paved the way for the belief that safe, accessible, and convenient autonomous vehicles may be realized in the near future. Despite tremendous advances within this context, fundamental challenges around safety and reliability are limit...
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent advances in machine learning technologies and sensing have paved the
way for the belief that safe, accessible, and convenient autonomous vehicles
may be realized in the near future. Despite tremendous advances within this
context, fundamental challenges around safety and reliability are limiting
their arrival and comprehensive adoption. Autonomous vehicles are often tasked
with operating in dynamic and uncertain environments. As a result, they often
make use of highly complex components, such as machine learning approaches, to
handle the nuances of sensing, actuation, and control. While these methods are
highly effective, they are notoriously difficult to assure. Moreover, within
uncertain and dynamic environments, design time assurance analyses may not be
sufficient to guarantee safety. Thus, it is critical to monitor the correctness
of these systems at runtime. One approach for providing runtime assurance of
systems with components that may not be amenable to formal analysis is the
simplex architecture, where an unverified component is wrapped with a safety
controller and a switching logic designed to prevent dangerous behavior. In
this paper, we propose using a real-time reachability algorithm for the
implementation of the simplex architecture to assure the safety of a 1/10 scale
open source autonomous vehicle platform known as F1/10. The reachability
algorithm that we leverage (a) provides provable guarantees of safety, and (b)
is used to detect potentially unsafe scenarios. In our approach, the need to
analyze an underlying controller is abstracted away, instead focusing on the
effects of the controller's decisions on the system's future states. We
demonstrate the efficacy of our architecture through a vast set of experiments
conducted both in simulation and on an embedded hardware platform. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2205.01419 |