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.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • EU AdaptIVe automated driving project begins work
    February 5, 2014
    The European research project AdaptIVe (Automated Driving Applications & Technologies for Intelligent Vehicles), a consortium of 29 partners, began work on 1 February. It aims to achieve breakthrough advances that will lead to more efficient and safe automated driving. The consortium, led by Volkswagen, consists of ten major automotive manufacturers, suppliers, research institutes and universities and small and medium-sized businesses. The project has a budget of US$33.7 million and is funded by the Eu
  • TSS Aimsun expertise on show in Flourish consortium
    April 5, 2016
    In February 2016, the UK government announced that the Flourish consortium was a winner in its multi-million pound research programme to fuel development in user-centric autonomous vehicle technology and connected transport systems.
  • V2V technology extends to motorcycles
    June 11, 2013
    As part of the US Safety Pilot Model Deployment, the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute (UMTRI) has partnered with two motorcycle manufacturers, Honda and BMW to launch a motorcycle study using vehicle-to-vehicle (V2V) communications technology from Cohda Wireless to determine how cars, trucks, buses and motorcycles interact. Two tasks, motorcycle communications feasibility testing and motorcycle to vehicle performance testing, will be conducted as a proof of concept for incorporating
  • Two seconds – the difference between life and death
    October 17, 2016
    Professor Donald Fisher has spent 15 years identifying factors that increase the crash risk of novice and older drivers. His findings highlight the difference between living and dying, Colin Sowman reports.