Maximize mileage, safety, or operating
life? Driving behavior behind the wheel has a big influence on the
vehicle. Fraunhofer researchers have developed a driving simulator
designed to make the "human factor" more calculable for vehicle
engineers.
Simulations are an important
development tool in the automobile and utility vehicle industries—they enable engineers to see into the future. The properties of
vehicle components, such as how they respond in an accident, their
reliability, or their energy efficiency can be investigated using
simulations before the first component is manufactured. To continue
to maintain the prediction power of the results, however, all of the
influences that the vehicle is exposed to later on in actual
operation must be taken into account—including those of drivers and
operators.
Researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute
for Industrial Mathematics ITWM in Kaiserslautern, Germany, have
developed an interactive driving simulator using RODOS (robot-based
driving and operation simulator) with which realistic interaction
between human and vehicle can be analyzed. “Driving behavior is a
key factor that is often insufficiently accounted for in
computational models,” according to Dr. Klaus Dreßler of ITWM. No
doubt there are algorithms that are supposed to represent the “human
factor” in simulations—however, these do not properly reflect the
complexity of human behavior. For this reason, researchers at ITWM
have shifted to a hybrid design for simulation. Hybrid here means a
real person interacts with a simulation environment—a well-known
example of this is a flight simulator, in which pilots regularly
practice extreme situations. In the automotive and utility-vehicle
sector, only a few manufacturers have had this kind of facility at
their disposal, as its development involves a lot of effort and
expense.
An
enormous industrial robot manipulator simulates braking maneuvers
.
The simulation facility’s structure
at ITWM consists of a real vehicle interior where the test driver can
operate the steering wheel, accelerator, and brakes as usual. The
vehicle interior is integrated into a 6-axis robotic system that
looks like a gigantic gripper arm and can simulate acceleration,
braking, or tight curves by leaning and rotating. “We have much
greater room to maneuver than with the kinematic systems usually
employed today. At the same time, the space requirements are
comparatively quite low,” according to project manager Michael
Kleer.
For test drivers to behave
authentically, they must have the feeling they are actually situated
in a moving vehicle. If movements of the simulator do not match the
visual impressions, this not only influences driver reactions, it can
also lead to symptoms like kinetosis. Simulator sickness is triggered
by contradictory sensory perceptions, the same way motion sickness or
sea sickness is. “To prevent these unpleasant side effects, we have
developed our motion cueing algorithms that generate the control
signals for the robot in close cooperation with researchers in
cognition,” explains Dreßler. On the basis of this
interdisciplinary knowledge, the motions of the simulator can be
matched to visual input so they are perceived as very natural by the
test drivers. At the same time, an enormous projection dome provides
the external impression of real driving. 18 projectors provide a
realistic 300 degree view of the situation for the driver. “You can
imagine it as resembling an IMAX theater,” according to Dreßler.
Driving simulations that also take into
account the human effects on a vehicle may become more important in
future. The increasing number of driver assistance systems will
themselves make the human-machine interface in automobiles
increasingly important. The demands placed on simulations will thus
become increasingly more specific. “That is where we have an
additional advantage with our approach: all the algorithms are
proprietary in-house developments—so we therefore can match the
individual algorithm parameters to project-specific problems,” says
Kleer.
The simulation facility at ITWM has
been in operation since July 2013—and two projects in
collaboration with the Volvo Construction Equipment company are
presently underway. From April 7 to 11 the technology will be shown
at the Hannover Messe trade fair (Hall 7, Booth B10).
No comments:
Post a Comment