U-M Taps AI to Make Autonomous Vehicle Testing 99% More Efficient

The development of truly autonomous vehicles (AVs) has been hindered by the cost and time associated with safety testing, but a new system created at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor shows that artificial intelligence can reduce the testing miles required by 99.99 percent.
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Photo of front seats of car with two screens demonstrating how the AI-based testing works.
A new autonomous vehicle testing system developed at the University of Michigan uses AI to simulate dangerous situations and reckless drivers. // Photo by Brenda Ahearn

The development of truly autonomous vehicles (AVs) has been hindered by the cost and time associated with safety testing, but a new system created at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor shows that artificial intelligence can reduce the testing miles required by 99.99 percent.

This system could lead to a paradigm shift that enables manufacturers to verify more quickly whether their autonomous vehicle technology can operate safely and reduce the incidence of crashes. In a simulated environment, vehicles trained by artificial intelligence perform perilous maneuvers, forcing the AV to make decisions that confront drivers only rarely on the road, a necessary step in training the vehicles.

To encounter those kinds of situations repeatedly for data collection, real-world test vehicles need to drive for hundreds of millions or even hundreds of billions of miles.

“The safety-critical events — the accidents, or the near misses — are very rare in the real world, and oftentimes AVs have difficulty handling them,” says Henry Liu, U-M professor of civil engineering and director of both Mcity and the Center for Connected and Automated Transportation, a regional transportation research center funded by the U.S. Department of Transportation.

U-M researchers refer to the problem as the “curse of rarity,” and they’re tackling it by learning from real-world traffic data that contains rare safety-critical events. Testing conducted on test tracks mimicking urban as well as highway driving showed that the AI-trained virtual vehicles can accelerate the testing process by thousands of times. The study appears on the cover of Nature.

“The AV test vehicles we’re using are real, but we’ve created a mixed-reality testing environment. The background vehicles are virtual, which allows us to train them to create challenging scenarios that only happen rarely on the road,” Liu says.

U-M’s team used an approach to train the background vehicles that strips away non-safety-critical information from the driving data used in the simulation. Basically, it removes the long spans when other drivers and pedestrians behave in responsible, expected ways — but preserves dangerous moments that demand action, such as another driver running a red light.

Through the use of only safety-critical data to train the neural networks that make maneuver decisions, test vehicles can encounter more of those rare events in a shorter amount of time, making testing much cheaper.

“Dense reinforcement learning will unlock the potential of AI for validating the intelligence of safety-critical autonomous systems such as AVs, medical robotics, and aerospace systems,” says Shuo Feng, assistant professor in the Department of Automation at Tsinghua University in Beijing and former assistant research scientist at the U-M Transportation Research Institute.

“It also opens the door for accelerated training of safety-critical autonomous systems by leveraging AI-based testing agents, which may create a symbiotic relationship between testing and training, accelerating both fields.”

And it’s clear that training, along with the time and expense involved, is an impediment. An October 2022 Bloomberg article stated that although robo-taxi leader Waymo’s vehicles had driven 20 million miles over the previous decade, far more data was needed.

“That means,” the author wrote, “its cars would have to drive an additional 25 times their total before we’d be able to say, with even a vague sense of certainty, that they cause fewer deaths than bus drivers.”

Testing of the new system was conducted at Mcity’s urban environment in Ann Arbor, as well as the highway test track at the American Center for Mobility in Ypsilanti Township.

Launched in 2015, Mcity was the world’s first purpose-built test environment for connected and autonomous vehicles. With new support from the National Science Foundation, outside researchers will soon be able to run remote, mixed-reality tests using both the simulation and physical test track, similar to those reported in this study.

Real-world data sets that support Mcity simulations are collected from smart intersections in Ann Arbor and Detroit, with more intersections to be equipped. Each intersection is fitted with privacy-preserving sensors to capture and categorize each road user, identifying its speed and direction. The research was funded by the Center for Connected and Automated Transportation and the National Science Foundation.

Read the full study here.