Congested regions in videos put forward higher requirements for target detection algorithms, and the key detection of congested regions provides optimization directions for improving the accuracy of detection algorithms. In order to make the target detection algorithm pay more attention to the congested area, an automatic selection method of a traffic congestion area based on surveillance videos is proposed. Firstly, the image is segmented with superpixels, and a superpixel boundary map is extracted. Then, the mean filtering method is used to process the superpixel boundary map, and a fixed threshold is used to filter pixels with high texture complexity. Finally, a maximin method is used to extract the traffic congestion area. Monitoring data of night and rainy days were collected to expand the UA-DETRAC data set, and experiments were carried out on the extended data set. The results show that the proposed method can realize automatic setting of the congestion area under various weather conditions, such as full light, night and rainy days.
Pedestrian tracking is an important aspect of autonomous vehicles environment perception in a vehicle running environment. The performance of the existing pedestrian tracking algorithms is limited by the complex traffic environment, the changeable appearance characteristics of pedestrians and the frequent occlusion interaction, which leads to the insufficient accuracy and stability of tracking. Therefore, this paper proposes a detector–tracker integration framework for autonomous vehicle pedestrian tracking. Firstly, a pedestrian objects detector based on the improved YOLOv7 network was established. Space-to-Depth convolution layer was adopted to improve the backbone network of YOLOv7. Then, a novel appearance feature extraction network is proposed, which integrates the convolutional structural re-parameterization idea to construct a full-scale feature extraction block, which is the optimized DeepSORT tracker. Finally, experiments were carried out on MOT17 and MOT20 public datasets and driving video sequences, and the tracking performance of the proposed framework was evaluated by comparing it with the most advanced multi-object tracking algorithms. Quantitative analysis results show that the framework has high tracking accuracy. Compared with DeepSORT, MOTA improves by 2.3% in the MOT17 dataset and MOTA improves by 4.2% in the MOT20 dataset. Through qualitative evaluation on real driving video sequences, the framework proposed in this paper is robust in a variety of climate environments, and can be effectively applied to the pedestrian tracking of autonomous vehicles.
Vehicle control requirements for longitudinal and lateral driver control are varied in different road geometries; this makes it irrational and superfluous to represent driving control characteristics with repetitive indices. To address this problem, the present study used multiple cross-analysis methods of vehicle running state parameters from experienced drivers in order to deeply study driving control characteristics in different road geometries. Six common road geometries with different driving control emphases were selected as typical road types and twenty-five experienced drivers were asked to perform an actual driving test. Taking the indices in the long straight road as the control variable, the indices in other roads were compared with it and judged according to the three methods: the overall distribution by box plots, significant difference test by analysis of variance (ANOVA) and relative distance calculation by technique for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution (TOPSIS). Moreover, the weight of the driving control characteristic index was calculated through the entropy weight method to reflect its importance. In this paper, the relationships between road geometry and driving control characteristics explicate the influence mechanism and interaction of road geometry on driving behavior, and the indicators that can reflect the control characteristics in different road types are obtained.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.