Federal Highway Research Institute, Bruderstrasse 53, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany.
Traffic Inj Prev. 2013;14 Suppl:S2-12. doi: 10.1080/15389588.2013.797574.
It is commonly agreed that active safety will have a significant impact on reducing accident figures for pedestrians and probably also bicyclists. However, chances and limitations for active safety systems have only been derived based on accident data and the current state of the art, based on proprietary simulation models. The objective of this article is to investigate these chances and limitations by developing an open simulation model.
This article introduces a simulation model, incorporating accident kinematics, driving dynamics, driver reaction times, pedestrian dynamics, performance parameters of different autonomous emergency braking (AEB) generations, as well as legal and logical limitations. The level of detail for available pedestrian accident data is limited. Relevant variables, especially timing of the pedestrian appearance and the pedestrian's moving speed, are estimated using assumptions. The model in this article uses the fact that a pedestrian and a vehicle in an accident must have been in the same spot at the same time and defines the impact position as a relevant accident parameter, which is usually available from accident data. The calculations done within the model identify the possible timing available for braking by an AEB system as well as the possible speed reduction for different accident scenarios as well as for different system configurations.
The simulation model identifies the lateral impact position of the pedestrian as a significant parameter for system performance, and the system layout is designed to brake when the accident becomes unavoidable by the vehicle driver. Scenarios with a pedestrian running from behind an obstruction are the most demanding scenarios and will very likely never be avoidable for all vehicle speeds due to physical limits. Scenarios with an unobstructed person walking will very likely be treatable for a wide speed range for next generation AEB systems.
人们普遍认为,主动安全将对减少行人和骑自行车的人事故数量产生重大影响。然而,主动安全系统的机会和局限性仅基于事故数据和当前的专有模拟模型得出。本文的目的是通过开发开放的模拟模型来研究这些机会和局限性。
本文介绍了一种模拟模型,该模型包含事故运动学、驾驶动力学、驾驶员反应时间、行人动力学、不同自主紧急制动(AEB)代的性能参数,以及法律和逻辑限制。现有的行人事故数据的详细程度有限。使用假设来估计相关变量,特别是行人出现的时间和行人的移动速度。本文中的模型利用了这样一个事实,即在事故中,行人与车辆必须在同一地点同时出现,并将碰撞位置定义为相关事故参数,该参数通常可从事故数据中获得。模型内的计算确定了 AEB 系统可能用于制动的可用时间,以及不同事故场景和不同系统配置下的可能减速。
模拟模型将行人的侧面碰撞位置确定为系统性能的重要参数,系统的布局设计为在车辆驾驶员无法避免事故时进行制动。行人从障碍物后面奔跑的场景是最具挑战性的场景,由于物理限制,几乎不可能避免所有车辆速度的情况。无障碍行人行走的场景对于下一代 AEB 系统的广泛速度范围来说很可能是可以处理的。