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Always one thought ahead thanks
to Car-2-X Communication.
MUNICH, April 22, 2009 A child suddenly runs out
into the road from between two parked cars its
every drivers nightmare scenario. BMW Group Research
and Technology, in collaboration with leading research institutes
in Germany, has now developed a system that can take the
heat out of such situations thanks to so-called Car-2-X
Communication. The research project AMULETT (the German
acronym for Active mobile accident avoidance and mitigation
of accident effects through cooperative data acquisition
and tracking technology) involves vehicles communicating
with a radio transponder carried, for example, by a pedestrian
for purposes of personal safety. Cooperative sensor systems
between the car and the transponder mean that even hidden
pedestrians can be recognised.
The Bavarian State Ministry for Economic Affairs, Infrastructure,
Transport and Technology funded the three-year research
project. Alongside BMW Forschung und Technik GmbH, the other
participants are Continental Safety Engineering International
GmbH, the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits,
the Institute for High Frequency Engineering at Munichs
Technical University, and ZENTEC GmbH. On 6 May the results
of AMULETT will be presented to the public to mark the conclusion
of the project.
AMULETT radio technology for enhanced road traffic
safety.
In their AMULETT project, researchers investigated the
possibilities of Car-2-X Communication with the aim of improving
pedestrian safety. To this end they linked up autonomous
on-board systems for driving environment assessment with
communication between the car and a transponder carried
by a pedestrian or cyclist for their own safety. By means
of this cooperative sensor technology, the vehicle exchanges
data with the Amulett, an active RFID-like (Radio
Frequency Identification) element, which could in future
be integrated into a schoolbag, a mobile phone or a walking
stick, for example.
In detail it works as follows: upon receiving an interrogation
impulse from the vehicle, the transponder transmits an identification
message. This enables its position to be fixed and, even
more importantly, identifies its carrier as a vulnerable
road user. It works even if the carrier is not within sight
of the driver at the time of danger, for example if the
pedestrian is obscured by a parked car or a hedge. The Amulett
identifies itself through a code that is frequently changed
at random to prevent the carrier being linked to a specific
transponder. In this way we ensure that the user remains
anonymous in compliance with data protection laws
without compromising the prediction of the sensor
data, explains Dr Ralph Rasshofer, AMULETT Project
Manager for BMW Group Research and Technology.
The test vehicle identifies the electromagnetic waves using
a multi-antenna system in a frequency band of 2.4 GHz, with
the angle of arrival and identification determined by a
signal processing unit. The distance between the pedestrian
and the vehicle is calculated on the basis of the signals
travelling time between the interrogation from the car and
the response from the transponder essentially the
same principle as used in echo sounding. If, on the basis
of this data, the system anticipates an impending collision,
the driver is given a warning. If the driver does not respond,
further measures can be triggered in the car to avoid an
accident or mitigate its consequences and, in the
future, emergency braking will be applied as a last resort.
Thanks to AMULETT we will be able to draw very precise
conclusions from the sensor data in future. This grants
us the possibility of giving road traffic safety another
significant boost because for us, every accident
victim is one too many, adds Rasshofer. In the BMW
Group Research and Technology prototype, the driver receives
feedback via the Head-up Display, similar to Night Vision
with pedestrian recognition already available today. Part
of our development work is to ensure that feedback from
driver assistance and information systems is designed in
such a way that the driver is on no account alarmed, that
it can be intuitively interpreted, and that is will lead
to the appropriate response, says Rasshofer. Ongoing
research is thus focused on the exclusion of false alarms
(e.g. from AMULETT carriers sitting inside a car) and the
systems evaluation ability when dealing with many
carriers e.g. in city traffic.
The best accident is the one that never happens.
The BMW Group is systematically striving to develop driver
assistance and information systems that are targeted at
helping motorists to defuse hazardous situations on the
road. Here special attention is also directed at the most
vulnerable people concerned: pedestrians, cyclists and other
non-motorised road users. It explains why BMW is the worlds
first car manufacturer to offer BMW Night Vision with pedestrian
recognition in the new BMW 7 Series. After all, a large
proportion of fatal pedestrian accidents happen at night,
many of them on the open road.
But what happens if there is no line of sight between the
sensors in the vehicle in the case of Night Vision
those in the thermal imaging camera and the pedestrian,
e.g. in busy daytime traffic? This is precisely what the
AMULETT research effort is tackling. Accident statistics
repeatedly and unambiguously show that in 40 percent of
all fatal pedestrian accidents, the driver does not see
the person until just before the impact. In the case of
children the situation is even more dramatic. According
to the 2006 figures from Germanys Federal Statistical
Office, 48 percent of accident victims between the age of
six and 14 ran onto the road without looking out for traffic.
25 percent of accidents involving children happened when
they suddenly appeared from behind a visual barrier. With
AMULETT, the research partners have succeeded in taking
a further significant step towards raising pedestrian safety
in road traffic. Thanks to the improved communications this
system provides, road users who are obscured from view can
be identified early on and accidents can be prevented,
says Prof. Dr. Dr. Benedikt von Hebenstreit of the Centre
of Transport and Safety at Zurichs University of Applied
Sciences.
On 6 May the AMULETT project will be presented to industry
specialists and the public during a special event including
a programme of talks and a live demonstration. Further information
can be found on the homepage www.projekt-amulett.de
Partners in the three-year research project:
BMW Forschung und Technik GmbH is a 100 % subsidiary of
BMW AG and is in charge of the following research topics
at the BMW Group since 2003: VehicleTechnology, CleanEnergy
(hydrogen technology), EfficientDynamics (intelligent energy
management/alternative drivetrains), ConnectedDrive (driver
assistance /active safety systems) and ITDrive (IT-architecture
and communication technology). Being a limited company,
legal autonomy from the BMW Group allows a maximum of creativity
and flexibility.
An internationally established network, with Technical
Offices in the USA (Palo Alto, CA und Clemson, SC) and Japan
(Tokyo) as well as Liaison Offices in France (with Eurécom
in Sophia Antipolis) and in Germany (with German Research
Center for Artificial Intelligence, DFKI GmbH, in Saarbrücken)
ensures global access to trends and technologies.
Continental Safety Engineering International GmbH is involved
in the AMULETT funded project through its Advanced System
Engineering department. The focus here is on active pedestrian
protection systems, an area in which Continental Safety
Engineering International GmbH develops both sensor systems
for detecting potential pedestrian collision and actuator
systems to mitigate leg and head impact.
The Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Circuits IIS carries
out research and development work in close collaboration
with industry customers and in the fields of digital radio,
audio and multimedia technology, digital cinema, design
automation, integrated circuits and sensor systems, wired,
wireless and optical networks, localisation and navigation,
high-speed cameras, ultra fine focus X-ray technology, image
processing and medical technology, as well as ICT technologies
for the logistics and services sector. For the AMULETT project
the Fraunhofer IIS is working on developments for radio
localisation systems. One of the focuses is on the miniaturisation
of radio technology and rapid signal processing for real-time
localisation.
The Institute for High Frequency Engineering at the Technical
University of Munich develops and tests components, modules
and systems for radar and communication applications. These
applications are mainly designed for driving environment
assessment systems for cars. The Institute for High Frequency
Engineering has for many years also been involved with cooperative
sensor systems and networks. Contrary to conventional approaches,
the system design is oriented primarily towards optimal
measuring quality and only secondarily to the requirements
of the communication channel. The result is precise and
rapid distance measurements with acceptable communication
quality and bandwidth. Work on the AMULETT project included
basic research, inter alia, on the use of channelisation
codes for distance measurement.
ZENTEC GmbH supports the associated partners in matters
of project management and project organisation. As a technology
centre in the Bavarian Lower Main region with a longstanding
tradition in vehicle safety, ZENTEC assists the project
partners in publishing the project results and developing
them further.
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