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ESE Thesis Defense: “Accelerated Risk Assessment and Domain Adaptation for Autonomous Vehicles”

April 2, 2021 at 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM

Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are already driving on public roads around the US; however, their rate of deployment far outpaces quality assurance and regulatory efforts. Consequently, even the most elementary tasks, such as automated lanekeeping, have not been certified for safety, and operations are constrained to narrow domains. First, due to the limitations of worst-case analysis techniques, we hypothesize that new methods must be developed to quantify and bound the risk of AVs. Counterintuitively, the better the performance of the AV under consideration, the harder it is to accurately estimate its risk as failures become rare and difficult to sample. This thesis presents a new estimation procedure and framework which can efficiently evaluate AV risk even in the rare event regime; we demonstrate the approach’s performance on a variety of AV software stacks. Second, given a framework for AV evaluation, we turn to a related question: how can AV software be efficiently adapted for new or expanded operating regimes? We hypothesize that stochastic search techniques can improve the naive trial-and-error approach commonly used today. One of the most challenging aspects of this task is that proficient driving requires making tradeoffs between performance and safety. Moreover, for novel scenarios or operational domains there may be little data which can be used to understand the behavior of other drivers. To study these challenges we create a low-cost scale platform, simulator, benchmarks, and baseline solutions. Using this testbed, we develop a new population-based self play method for creating dynamic actors and detail both offline and online procedures for adapting AV components to these conditions. Taken as a whole, this work represents a rigorous approach to the evaluation and improvement of AV software.

Matthew O'Kelly

ESE Ph.D. Candidate

Matthew O’Kelly is a Ph.D candidate in Electrical and Systems Engineering at the University of Pennsylvania advised by Rahul Mangharam. His research interests span cyber-physical systems under the broad goal of embedding trustworthy, personalized autonomy in the tools and objects integral to daily life. During his Ph.D, he was an NSF-EAPSI fellow at Nagoya University (2015, Shinpei Kato), a visiting student at MIT CSAIL’s Robot Locomotion Group (2017, Russ Tedrake), a visiting student at Stanford SAIL (2018, John Duchi), and an intern at Intel Labs’ autonomous vehicles group (2018, Ignacio Alvarez). In addition to his research interests, he has led the development of the F1TENTH project, an open source autonomous racing platform, class, and competition series. Prior to joining the University of Pennsylvania, he received a B.S. and M.S. in Mechanical Engineering from The Ohio State University. Matthew is supported by an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship.

Details

Date:
April 2, 2021
Time:
2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Event Category:
Event Tags:

Venue

Zoom- Email mokelly@seas.upenn.edu for link

Organizer

Electrical and Systems Engineering
Phone
215-898-6823
Email
eseevents@seas.upenn.edu
View Organizer Website