Skip to main content

Mucca demos multi-vehicle collision avoidance tech

A project whose members include Connected Places Catapult and Cranfield University has developed technology which could reduce the number of vehicle collisions on UK motorways.
By Ben Spencer March 26, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Mucca develops technology to reduce fatalities at UK motorways (Source: MuccA)

The Multi-Car Avoidance (Mucca) research and development project used artificial intelligence and Vehicle to Vehicle (V2V) communications to instruct autonomous vehicles (AVs) to cooperatively make decisions to avoid potential incidents.
 
Mucca partners are hoping the technology will reduce the 4,500 accidents each year on UK motorways and the £8 billion associated costs.

Charlie Wartnaby, technical lead for project partner Applus Idiada (Institute for Applied Automotive Research) UK, says collective collision avoidance between the cars was mediated by V2V radio.
 
“Combining connectivity and automated driving like this has applications beyond the valuable emergency role proven here to more general cooperative vehicle movement, promising enhanced safety and efficiency on our roads in future,” Wartnaby adds.
 
Catapult says the AVs successfully completed replicas of real-life motorway scenarios on test tracks. Once an incident is detected, the vehicles share information by radio links and on-board computers calculate the best manoeuvres to avoid obstacles and safely steer the agreed path to avoid an accident, the company adds.
 
Ross Walker and Icaro Bezerra-Viana, research fellows at Cranfield University, were also involved in the project.
 
Walker explains: “We were able to develop computer algorithms that help the cars to react in a more human-like way when avoiding collisions. This can allow any potential accidents to be recognised in advance, and consequently avoided before they have chance to begin developing.”
 
Bezerra-Viana adds: “Computer simulations enabled us to model how human drivers behave on motorways, and how the proximity of surrounding cars influences their behaviour. The movement of the cars that surround a vehicle over the next few seconds can then be predicted in order to avoid a collision.”
 
Other partners involved in the project include Applus Idiada, Westfield Sports Car and SBD Automotive. It was funded by Innovate UK and the Centre for C/AVs.

Related Content

  • Software is at heart of safe vehicle connectivity, says Qt Group
    September 15, 2023
    Connected vehicle safety isn’t just under threat from malicious actors exploiting code – it’s also about avoiding software faults that could result in harm to people, says Patrick Shelly of Qt Group
  • Cooperative road infrastructures - progress and the future
    February 1, 2012
    Robert Bertini, deputy administrator of the USDOT's Research and Innovative Technology Administration, discusses the research and deployment paths of cooperative road infrastructures. High-level analysis by the US's National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) of the potential of Vehicle-to-Infrastructure/Infrastructure-to-Vehicle (V2I/I2V) and Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) technologies indicates that V2V could in exclusivity address a large proportion of crashes involving unimpaired drivers. In fact,
  • Lexus and Commsignia demo C-ITS tech in Sydney
    August 22, 2024
    Other partners included Bosch and Queensland government at ITS Australia Summit
  • ITS technology continues to progress
    December 7, 2012
    There is a lot more that appears from this sector that is ITS on an international scale, once the surface is scratched. Over the past two months we’ve uncovered a surprising amount of technological progression hitherto unannounced to the transportation industry worldwide. For example, at the beginning of November we were at the Vision exhibition in Stuttgart. This magazine has followed developments from the machine vision sector for some time as advanced digital cameras and automated processing systems bega