IEEE Access (Jan 2024)

Modeling of Motion Distortion Effect of Scanning LiDAR Sensors for Simulation-Based Testing

  • Arsalan Haider,
  • Lukas Haas,
  • Shotaro Koyama,
  • Lukas Elster,
  • Michael H. Kohler,
  • Michael Schardt,
  • Thomas Zeh,
  • Hideo Inoue,
  • Martin Jakobi,
  • Alexander W. Koch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3355066
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. 13020 – 13036

Abstract

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Automated vehicles use light detection and ranging (LiDAR) sensors for environmental scanning. However, the relative motion between the scanning LiDAR sensor and objects leads to a distortion of the point cloud. This phenomenon is known as the motion distortion effect, significantly degrading the sensor’s object detection capabilities and generating false negative or false positive errors. In this work, we have introduced ray tracing-based deterministic and analytical approaches to model the motion distortion effect on the scanning LiDAR sensor’s performance for simulation-based testing. In addition, we have performed dynamic test drives at a proving ground to compare real LiDAR data with the motion distortion effect simulation data. The real-world scenarios, the environmental conditions, the digital twin of the scenery, and the object of interest (OOI) are replicated in the virtual environment of commercial software to obtain the synthetic LiDAR data. The real and the virtual test drives are compared frame by frame to validate the motion distortion effect modeling. The mean absolute percentage error (MAPE), the occupied cell ratio (OCR), and the Barons cross-correlation coefficient (BCC) are used to quantify the correlation between the virtual and the real LiDAR point cloud data. The results show that the deterministic approach matches the real measurements better than the analytical approach for the scenarios in which the yaw rate of the ego vehicle changes rapidly.

Keywords