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Vehicular visible light positioning for collision avoidance and platooning: a survey

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Noyan, Utku
Şahbaz, Furkan

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Relative vehicle positioning methods can contribute to safer and more efficient autonomous driving by enabling collision avoidance and platooning applications. For full automation, these applications require cm-level positioning accuracy and greater than 50 Hz update rate. Since sensor-based methods (e.g., LIDAR, cameras) have not been able to reliably satisfy these requirements under all conditions so far, complementary methods are sought. Recently, positioning based on visible light communication signals from vehicle head/tail LED lights (VLP) has shown significant promise as a complementary method attaining cm-level accuracy and near-kHz rate in realistic driving scenarios. Vehicular VLP methods measure relative bearing (angle) or range (distance) of transmitters (i.e., head/tail lights) based on received signals from on-board photodiodes and estimate transmitter relative positions based on those measurements. In this survey, we first review existing vehicular VLP methods and propose a new method that advances the state-of-the-art in positioning performance. Next, we analyze the theoretical and simulated performance of all methods in realistic driving scenarios under challenging noise and weather conditions, real asymmetric light beam patterns and different vehicle dimensions and light placements. Our simulation results show that the newly proposed VLP method is the overall best performer, and can indeed satisfy the accuracy and rate requirements for localization in collision avoidance and platooning applications within practical constraints. Finally, we discuss remaining open challenges that are faced for the deployment of VLP solutions in the automotive sector and further research questions.

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IEEE-Inst Electrical Electronics Engineers Inc

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Civil engineering, Electrical engineering, Electronic engineering, Transportation science and technology

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IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems

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10.1109/TITS.2023.3349160

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