{"title":"Development of a Concept of Operations for an autonomous tram system","authors":"J. Laarni, Antti Väätänen","doi":"10.54941/ahfe1002875","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Public transportation is becoming smart and autonomous. Also trams and\n their operation environments are becoming autonomous, and it has been\n envisioned that in the near future trams could drive among other traffic in\n all conditions and circumstances. On the other hand, there are several\n challenges in the development of autonomous tram systems, since trams are\n operating in urban environments where high demands are set for sensors and\n sensor networks aiming at reliable detection of pedestrians and other\n vehicles. We are developing ‘The SmartRail ecosystem’ setting, which\n promotes transition from traditional engineering and manufacturing towards\n more advanced service and business ecosystem enabling a smart autonomous\n tram and integrated digital services for its whole life-cycle. The paper\n will present the development of a Concept of Operations (ConOps) for\n autonomous smart trams to demonstrate how they can be applied and utilized\n in public transportation in the future. The proposed ConOps can be\n considered as a boundary object in the design, validation or procurement of\n autonomous trams. We also propose that the ConOps should be maintained\n throughout the system life-cycle as an overview description and definition\n of overall goals and policies.A ConOps is a high-level description of how\n the elements of a system and entities in its environment interact in order\n to achieve their stated goals. The ConOps for an autonomous tram system will\n include, among others, the following information: overall goals and\n constraints of the SmartRail system, overall environmental characteristics,\n other stakeholders, main system elements and functions, operational states\n and scenarios, high-level performance requirements, system advantages and\n disadvantages, and human-autonomy teaming concept. Four different\n operational states will be considered: 1) starting a morning shift at the\n tram garage; 2) approaching a pedestrian crossing; 3) approaching and\n passing a tram stop; and 4) crossing other vehicles. The effect of seasonal\n conditions and weather events are also considered. A ConOps diagram has been\n drawn to illustrate how different stakeholders and the operating environment\n interact, and what kind of information is shared between different\n stakeholders.A special attention will be paid on the development of\n human-autonomy teaming concept for smart autonomous tram systems. A typical\n autonomous framework is based on a cross-tabulation of a scale of level of\n automation with stages of human information processing for a set of\n operational situations. We propose flexible automation solution in which the\n control function can be flexibly allocated to the automation or to the human\n operator at different phases of a tram route.Various knowledge elicitation\n techniques were used to gather relevant information for the ConOps: The\n development of the ConOps is based on a literature review, semi-structured\n interviews of tram drivers and trainers, and group interviews of experts\n working on research and development of autonomous road vehicles.","PeriodicalId":269162,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Intelligent Human Systems Integration (IHSI 2023) Integrating People and Intelligent Systems, February 22–24, 2023, Venice, Italy","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings of the 6th International Conference on Intelligent Human Systems Integration (IHSI 2023) Integrating People and Intelligent Systems, February 22–24, 2023, Venice, Italy","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.54941/ahfe1002875","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Public transportation is becoming smart and autonomous. Also trams and
their operation environments are becoming autonomous, and it has been
envisioned that in the near future trams could drive among other traffic in
all conditions and circumstances. On the other hand, there are several
challenges in the development of autonomous tram systems, since trams are
operating in urban environments where high demands are set for sensors and
sensor networks aiming at reliable detection of pedestrians and other
vehicles. We are developing ‘The SmartRail ecosystem’ setting, which
promotes transition from traditional engineering and manufacturing towards
more advanced service and business ecosystem enabling a smart autonomous
tram and integrated digital services for its whole life-cycle. The paper
will present the development of a Concept of Operations (ConOps) for
autonomous smart trams to demonstrate how they can be applied and utilized
in public transportation in the future. The proposed ConOps can be
considered as a boundary object in the design, validation or procurement of
autonomous trams. We also propose that the ConOps should be maintained
throughout the system life-cycle as an overview description and definition
of overall goals and policies.A ConOps is a high-level description of how
the elements of a system and entities in its environment interact in order
to achieve their stated goals. The ConOps for an autonomous tram system will
include, among others, the following information: overall goals and
constraints of the SmartRail system, overall environmental characteristics,
other stakeholders, main system elements and functions, operational states
and scenarios, high-level performance requirements, system advantages and
disadvantages, and human-autonomy teaming concept. Four different
operational states will be considered: 1) starting a morning shift at the
tram garage; 2) approaching a pedestrian crossing; 3) approaching and
passing a tram stop; and 4) crossing other vehicles. The effect of seasonal
conditions and weather events are also considered. A ConOps diagram has been
drawn to illustrate how different stakeholders and the operating environment
interact, and what kind of information is shared between different
stakeholders.A special attention will be paid on the development of
human-autonomy teaming concept for smart autonomous tram systems. A typical
autonomous framework is based on a cross-tabulation of a scale of level of
automation with stages of human information processing for a set of
operational situations. We propose flexible automation solution in which the
control function can be flexibly allocated to the automation or to the human
operator at different phases of a tram route.Various knowledge elicitation
techniques were used to gather relevant information for the ConOps: The
development of the ConOps is based on a literature review, semi-structured
interviews of tram drivers and trainers, and group interviews of experts
working on research and development of autonomous road vehicles.