Repository logo
 

Modelling the influence of sensory dynamics on linear and nonlinear driver steering control

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Cole, DJ 

Abstract

A recent review of the literature has indicated that sensory dynamics play an important role in the driver–vehicle steering task, motivating the design of a new driver model incorporating human sensory systems. This paper presents a full derivation of the linear driver model developed in previous work, and extends the model to control a vehicle with nonlinear tyres. Various nonlinear controllers and state estimators are compared with different approximations of the true system dynamics. The model simulation time is found to increase significantly with the complexity of the controller and state estimator. In general the more complex controllers perform best, although with certain vehicle and tyre models linearised controllers perform as well as a full nonlinear optimisation. Various extended Kalman filters give similar results, although the driver’s sensory dynamics reduce control performance compared with full state feedback. The new model could be used to design vehicle systems which interact more naturally and safely with a human driver.

Description

Keywords

driver behaviour, state estimation, nonlinear control, biodynamics, optimal control, driver–vehicle systems

Journal Title

Vehicle System Dynamics

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0042-3114
1744-5159

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis
Sponsorship
EPSRC (1355868)
This work was supported by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/P505445/1, studentship for Nash).
Relationships
Is supplemented by: