Guest Editorial Introduction to the Special Issue on the 2016 Grand Cooperative Driving Challenge
Review article, 2018

Cooperative driving is based on wireless communications between vehicles and between vehicles and roadside infrastructure, aiming for increased traffic flow and traffic safety, while decreasing fuel consumption and emissions. To support and accelerate the introduction of cooperative vehicles in everyday traffic, in 2011, nine international teams joined the Grand Cooperative Driving Challenge (GCDC). The challenge was to perform platooning, in which vehicles drive in road trains with short intervehicle distances. The results were reported in a Special Issue of IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems, published in September 2012 [item 1 in the Appendix].

Author

Jeroen Ploeg

Delft University of Technology

Cristofer Englund

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

Henk Nijmeijer

University of Groningen

Elham Semsar-Kazerooni

Concordia University

Steven E. Shladover

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)

Alexey Voronov

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Systems and control

Nathan Van De Wouw

Eindhoven University of Technology

IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems

1524-9050 (ISSN) 1558-0016 (eISSN)

Vol. 19 4 1208-1212

Subject Categories

Transport Systems and Logistics

Infrastructure Engineering

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1109/TITS.2018.2815103

More information

Latest update

5/14/2020