Suraksha: A Framework to Analyze the Safety Implications of Perception Design Choices in AVs

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Autonomous vehicles (AVs) employ sophisticated computer systems and algorithms to perceive the surroundings, localize, plan, and control the vehicle. With several available design choices for each of the system components, making design decisions without analyzing system-level safety consequences may compromise performance and safety. This paper proposes an automated AV safety evaluation framework called Suraksha to quantify and analyze the sensitivities of different design parameters on AV system safety on a set of driving situations. In this paper, we employ Suraksha to analyze the safety effects of modulating a set of perception parameters (perception being the most resource demanding AV tasks) on an industrial AV system. Results reveal that (a) the perception demands vary with driving scenario difficulty levels; (b) small per-frame inaccuracies and reduced camera processing rate can be traded off for power savings or diversity; (c) tested AV system tolerates up to 10% perception noise and delay even in harder driving scenarios. These results motivate future safety- and performance-aware system optimizations.

Authors

Hengyu Zhao (University of California, San Diego)
Timothy Tsai (NVIDIA)
Jishen Zhao (University of California, San Diego)

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