Bosch Makes Urban Traffic Safer for Pedestrians

One step closer to automated driving in the city

Joint UR:BAN project concludes
• Bosch test vehicles compute how objects are going to move
• New assistance system helps drivers evade car-pedestrian accidents
• Bosch technology maneuvers cars safely through tight spaces in the city

Stuttgart and Düsseldorf, Germany – Traffic in cities is often congested and unpredictable. Cars share the streets with bicycles, motorcycles, trucks, and buses. It is not unusual to see cars double parked and pedestrians stepping out into the road without warning. The prospect of vehicles negotiating these hazards completely autonomously is almost unimaginable. “Autonomous driving is coming to cities, too. The level of automation is being gradually increased, starting out with driver assistance systems,” says Dr. Dietrich Manstetten, who works in research and advance engineering at Robert Bosch GmbH. Together with his colleague Dr. Lutz Bürkle and a team of 11 Bosch researchers, he is working on the technology needed to achieve this as part of the UR:BAN research initiative. The researchers have made great progress: “One of the things we’ve taught the cars is to predict what is going to happen next, and help drivers take evasive action whenever there is a threat of collision with a pedestrian,” Bürkle says. At the final presentation of the UR:BAN project in Düsseldorf on October 7, the team will be using test vehicles to demonstrate the results of their work.

Evasive steering support prevents up to 58% of collisions with pedestrians
A prerequisite for automated driving functions is to have sensors that reliably monitor the vehicle’s surroundings. “Only when we know what’s going on around the car can we determine the correct driving strategy,” Bürkle says. One component Bosch relies on for environment recognition is its stereo video camera, which can already be found in production vehicles. Mounted behind the windshield near the rear-view mirror, the camera monitors the area to the front of the test vehicle, and relays this information to a computer in the trunk. This computer analyzes the data more than ten times a second. But Bosch does not stop there. “Using smart algorithms, we get the computer to calculate how the environment is changing and where objects are headed,” Bürkle says. In other words, the Bosch technology not only detects the current position of pedestrians and cyclists, but also predicts where they will be in a second’s time. This presents new opportunities for pedestrian protection.

Based on this, the Bosch researchers have developed an assistance system that intervenes to prevent a collision with a pedestrian. At vehicle speeds up to 50 kilometers per hour, the system helps drivers brake and take evasive action. If braking alone is no longer enough to prevent a collision with a pedestrian who suddenly walks out in front of the car, the assistant instantaneously computes an evasive maneuver. As soon as drivers start using the steering wheel to take evasive action, the system kicks in to support the steering maneuver. “According to our studies, provided the driver reacts at least half a second before a potential collision, the assistance system can help avoid it in 58 percent of cases,” Bürkle says. But it is even better to avoid situations such as this in the first place. Critical situations arise when drivers are distracted and not looking at the road. Bosch’s solution to this is called driver observation. “By monitoring drivers’ line of sight, tiny cameras in the vehicle’s interior can tell whether their eyes are on the road,” Manstetten says. This makes it possible to warn distracted drivers in good time before the traffic situation becomes risky. In this context, Bosch believes that it helps to place indicators in the instrument clusters or an LED display on the dashboard directly in the driver’s field of vision.

Insights from the project feed into work on automated driving
Cities hold further challenges as places in which to drive. These include making turns and driving through tight spaces. While turning into a street, it is easy to overlook pedestrians who want to cross that street from the right or the left. Manstetten, Bürkle, and their colleagues have developed an assistant for just these situations. It recognizes crossing pedestrians and brings the car to a stop before an accident can happen. The assistance system for tight spaces goes even further. It maneuvers the car through tight spaces such as streets where cars are double parked. Using images from the stereo video camera, the computer calculates the path the car should travel. It then controls the electrical power steering and ensures that the car maneuvers through a tight space unscathed. The Bosch system also recognizes when a space is too tight to pass through, warning the driver or stopping the car in time before the exterior rear-view mirrors or fenders are damaged.

The insights that Bosch gains from the work of Manstetten, Bürkle, and the team of researchers in the UR:BAN project feed directly into the development of automated driving. Since 2011, the supplier of technology and services has focused this work at two locations: Abstatt, in Germany, and Palo Alto in California. Bosch has successfully been driving a number of automated test vehicles in normal traffic on the German A81 and U.S. I280 freeways since the beginning of 2013. The initial development goal is to deliver the highway pilot. From 2020, it is expected that vehicles featuring this Bosch technology will be capable of highly automated freeway driving without the need for constant driver supervision.

One project, one goal, and 31 partners from science and industry
UR:BAN (acronym from the German for urban space: user-friendly assistance systems and network management) is a publicly funded joint project. It brings together 31 partners from the automotive, automotive-supply, electronics, communications, and software industries, as well as universities, research institutes, and cities. The project’s aim is to develop driver assistance and traffic management systems for cities. Driver assistance systems are an essential step on the way to automated driving. UR:BAN is receiving some 40 million euros of funding from the German Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy. The project’s overall costs total approximately 80 million euros.

Related link: www.urban-online.org, www.automated-driving.com

About Mobility Solutions
Mobility Solutions is the largest Bosch Group business sector. In 2014, its sales came to 33.3 billion euros, or 68 percent of total group sales. This makes the Bosch Group one of the leading automotive suppliers. The Mobility Solutions business sector combines the group’s expertise in three mobility domains – automation, electrification, and connectivity – and offers its customers integrated mobility solutions. Its main areas of activity are injection technology and powertrain peripherals for internal-combustion engines, diverse solutions for powertrain electrification, vehicle safety systems, driver-assistance and automated functions, technology for user-friendly infotainment as well as vehicle-to-vehicle and vehicle-to-infrastructure communication, repair-shop concepts, and technology and services for the automotive aftermarket. Bosch is synonymous with important automotive innovations, such as electronic engine management, the ESP anti-skid system, and common-rail diesel technology.

About The Bosch Group
The Bosch Group is a leading global supplier of technology and services. It employs roughly 360,000 associates worldwide (as per April 1, 2015). The company generated sales of 49 billion euros in 2014.* Its operations are divided into four business sectors: Mobility Solutions, Industrial Technology, Consumer Goods, and Energy and Building Technology. The Bosch Group comprises Robert Bosch GmbH and its roughly 440 subsidiary and regional companies in some 60 countries. Including its sales and service partners, Bosch is represented in roughly 150 countries. This worldwide development, manufacturing, and sales network is the foundation for further growth. In 2014, Bosch applied for some 4,600 patents worldwide. The Bosch Group’s strategic objective is to create solutions for a connected life. Bosch improves quality of life worldwide with products and services that are innovative and spark enthusiasm. In short, Bosch creates technology that is “Invented for life.”

Further information is available online at www.bosch.com and www.bosch-press.com, http://twitter.com/BoschPresse.

*The sales figure disclosed for 2014 does not include the former joint ventures BSH Bosch und Siemens Hausgeräte GmbH (now BSH Hausgeräte GmbH) and ZF Lenksysteme GmbH (now Robert Bosch Automotive Steering GmbH), which have since been taken over completely.