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Early Lane Change Prediction for Automated Driving Systems Using Multi-Task Attention-Based Convolutional Neural Networks
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Early Lane Change Prediction for Automated Driving Systems Using Multi-Task Attention-Based Convolutional Neural Networks

Sajjad Mozaffari, Eduardo Arnold, Mehrdad Dianati and Saber Fallah
IEEE transactions on intelligent vehicles, Vol.7(3), pp.758-770
01/09/2022

Abstract

attention mechanism automated driving Convolutional neural networks curriculum learning Feature extraction multi-task learning Multitasking Predictive models Timing Vehicle behaviour prediction Vehicle dynamics
Lane change (LC) is one of the safety-critical manoeuvres in highway driving according to various road accident records. Thus, reliably predicting such manoeuvre in advance is critical for the safe and comfortable operation of automated driving systems. The majority of previous studies rely on detecting a manoeuvre that has been already started, rather than predicting the manoeuvre in advance. Furthermore, most of the previous works do not estimate the key timings of the manoeuvre (e.g., crossing time), which can actually yield more useful information for the decision making in the ego vehicle. To address these shortcomings, this paper proposes a novel multi-task model to simultaneously estimate the likelihood of LC manoeuvres and the time-to-lane-change (TTLC). In both tasks, an attention-based convolutional neural network (CNN) is used as a shared feature extractor from a bird's eye view representation of the driving environment. The spatial attention used in the CNN model improves the feature extraction process by focusing on the most relevant areas of the surrounding environment. In addition, two novel curriculum learning schemes are employed to train the proposed approach. The extensive evaluation and comparative analysis of the proposed method in existing benchmark datasets show that the proposed method outperforms state-of-the-art LC prediction models, particularly considering long-term prediction performance.

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