What is it about?
The book "Cooperative intelligent transport systems: towards high-level automated driving", aims to provide the most recent results of the development and deployment of Cooperative In-telligent Transport Systems (C-ITS), also called Connected Vehicles, in the domain of connect-ed, cooperative and automated road transport. Especially the role of ICT (Information and Communication Technologies) infrastructure is addressed. It provides comprehensive and up-to-date information by presenting both the main achievements (both theory and practice) and the challenges, in Europe, the US and Asia/Pacific. The book contains six parts and twenty-six chapters. Table of Contents Foreword – Commissioner Bulc Foreword – ITS Associations Preface List of acronyms Part I: Introduction 1 ICT-based cooperative ITS: toward automated road transport by Adrian Zlocki, Dominik Raudszus, Lutz Eckstein and Meng Lu Part II: General aspects of connected, cooperative and automated road transport 2 Deployment of C-ITS: a review of global initiatives by Martin Böhm 3 Architecture of cooperative intelligent transport systems by Glenn N. Havinoviski 4 Business-model innovation in the smart mobility domain by Oktay Turetken, Paul Grefen, Rick Gilsing, Onat Ege Adali and Baris Ozkan 5 Driving automation and its effects on drivers – a human factor perspective by Anna Anund, Ignacio Solis Marcos and Niklas Strand 6 Legal frameworks and strategies of regulatory authorities by Juhani Jääskeläinen Part III: V2X communication for cooperative and automated driving 7 Vehicular communication – a technical overview by Zoltán Jakó Ádám Knapp, Lajos Nagy and András Kovács 8 Connectivity for automated driving: an overview of corresponding R&D activities in Europe by Tim Leinmüller and Prachi Mittal 9 Standards and V2X implementation by Glenn N. Havinoviski 10 Assessment of C-ITS network performance scalability and transferability by Iraklis Stamos, Josep Maria Salanova Grau, Emmanouil Chaniotakis, Georgios Tsaples and Evangelos Mitsakis 11 5G for road safety services by Tiia Ojanperä, Jukka Mäkelä, Timo Sukuvaara, Matti Kutila and Pasi Pyykönen Part IV: ICT infrastructure for automated driving and future traffic management 12 Cooperative system integration by Julian Schindler, Daniel Wesemeyer, Andreas Leich, Michele Rondinone and Thomas Walter 13 ICT infrastructure for automated driving by Robbin Blokpoel and Meng Lu 14 Road infrastructure taxonomy for connected and automated driving by Angelos Amditis, Panagiotis Lytrivis, Evdokia Papanikolaou, Anna Carreras and Xavier Daura 15 Infrastructure-assisted automated driving in transition areas by Julian Schindler, Leonhard Lücken, Anton Wijbenga, Evangelos Mintsis and Sven Maerivoet 16 Connected and automated road transport from the perspective of cities by Suzanne Hoadley, Ondřej Přibyl and Jaap Vreeswijk Part V: Automated driving: market, impacts, roadmap, data quality and driver aspects 17 The evolution towards automated driving – insights from market penetration surveys in Germany by Susanne Schönebeck, Torsten Geißler, Jana Hölscher, Dana Gruschwitz and Alexander Schulz 18 Impact assessment of cooperative and automated vehicles by Luca Studer, Serio Agriesti, Paolo Gandini, Giovanna Marchionni and Marco Ponti 19 Deployment of highly automated driving up to 2040 – case Finland by Risto Kulmala and Seppo Pakarinen 20 A practical approach for defining and assessing data quality in automated driving by Peter Lubrich 21 Dynamic Bayesian networks for driver-intention recognition based on the traffic situation by Mark Eilers, Elham Fathiazar, Stefan Suck and Daniel Twumasi Part VI: R&D and applications of connected, cooperative and automated driving outside Europe 22 Recent advances in cooperative and automated driving in Japan and how we approach these technologies by Chunzhao Guo, Kiyosumi Kidono and Yoshiko Kojima 23 Promoting connected and automated vehicles with cooperative sensing and control technology by Shengbo Eben Li, Long Xin, Chang Liu, Jingliang Duan and Yougang Bian 24 Connected and automated vehicle research and development in the United States by Peng Hao, Guoyuan Wu, Kanok Boriboonsomsin and Matthew Barth 25 Mobility-on-demand using autonomous vehicles: systems, solutions and challenges by Malika Meghjani, Hongliang Guo, Zehui Meng, Hao Sun, Mengdan Feng, Wei Kang Leong, Ketki Chaudhary, Marcelo H. Ang Jr. and Daniela Rus Part VII: Discussion and conclusions 26 Cooperative and automated road transport: ambitions, challenges and key findings by Meng Lu Short biographies of the editor and authors Index
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Why is it important?
It provide the most recent global R&D results, and a comprehensive overview of relevant technologies and related aspects (e.g. legal, policy, business, and human factor)
Perspectives
Intelligent Transport Systems (ITS) have been a domain of substantial development for more than thirty years, enhancing safety, (energy and fuel) efficiency, comfort, and economic growth. Cooperative Intelligent Transport Systems (C-ITS), also referred to as Connected Vehicles, are a prelude to, and pave the way towards road transport automation. Vehicle connectivity and information exchange will be an important asset for future highly-automated driving. The book provides a comprehensive insight in the state of the art of C-ITS and automated driving, especially addresses the important role of ICT (Information and Communication Technologies) infrastructure, and presents the main achievements (both theory and practice), as well as the challenges in the domain in Europe, the US and Asia/ Pacific. https://digital-library.theiet.org/content/books/tr/pbtr025e
Dr Meng Lu
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This page is a summary of: Cooperative Intelligent Transport Systems: Towards high-level automated driving, September 2019, the Institution of Engineering and Technology (the IET),
DOI: 10.1049/pbtr025e.
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