High-Dimensional Fault Tolerance Testing of Highly Automated Vehicles Based on Low-Rank Models
July 28, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· π 2024 IEEE 27th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSC)
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Authors
Yuewen Mei, Tong Nie, Jian Sun, Ye Tian
arXiv ID
2407.21069
Category
cs.SE: Software Engineering
Cross-listed
cs.AI,
cs.LG,
cs.RO
Citations
3
Venue
2024 IEEE 27th International Conference on Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITSC)
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Ensuring fault tolerance of Highly Automated Vehicles (HAVs) is crucial for their safety due to the presence of potentially severe faults. Hence, Fault Injection (FI) testing is conducted by practitioners to evaluate the safety level of HAVs. To fully cover test cases, various driving scenarios and fault settings should be considered. However, due to numerous combinations of test scenarios and fault settings, the testing space can be complex and high-dimensional. In addition, evaluating performance in all newly added scenarios is resource-consuming. The rarity of critical faults that can cause security problems further strengthens the challenge. To address these challenges, we propose to accelerate FI testing under the low-rank Smoothness Regularized Matrix Factorization (SRMF) framework. We first organize the sparse evaluated data into a structured matrix based on its safety values. Then the untested values are estimated by the correlation captured by the matrix structure. To address high dimensionality, a low-rank constraint is imposed on the testing space. To exploit the relationships between existing scenarios and new scenarios and capture the local regularity of critical faults, three types of smoothness regularization are further designed as a complement. We conduct experiments on car following and cut in scenarios. The results indicate that SRMF has the lowest prediction error in various scenarios and is capable of predicting rare critical faults compared to other machine learning models. In addition, SRMF can achieve 1171 acceleration rate, 99.3% precision and 91.1% F1 score in identifying critical faults. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first work to introduce low-rank models to FI testing of HAVs.
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