A systematic review on the autonomous emergency steering assessments and tests methodology in ASEAN

Safety should be the top priority for any automaker - because traffic accidents roughly killed 1.4 million people worldwide, ranking tenth on the World Health Organization's list of leading causes of death. Two decades ago, the focus was on passive safety, where it helps vehicle occupants to su...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rasmana, Susijanto Tri, Adiputra, Dimas, Yahya, Wira Jazair, Abdul Rahman, Mohd. Azizi, Dwijotomo, Abdurahman, Mohammed Ariff, Mohd. Hatta, Abu Husain, Nurulakmar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society of Automotive Engineers Malaysia 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/97803/1/MohdAziziAbdul2021_ASystematicReviewontheAutonomousEmergency.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/97803/
http://dx.doi.org/10.56381/jsaem.v5i2.163
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Safety should be the top priority for any automaker - because traffic accidents roughly killed 1.4 million people worldwide, ranking tenth on the World Health Organization's list of leading causes of death. Two decades ago, the focus was on passive safety, where it helps vehicle occupants to survive the crash. However, the frontier in safety innovation has moved beyond airbags and side-impact protection. Today, the frontier is active safety for preventing collisions before they occur. In Euro NCAP 2025 Roadmap, this active safety frontier falls under the primary safety and has become one of the overall safety rating initiatives toward safer cars. The primary safety features four technologies to be assessed, including driver monitoring (2020), automatic emergency steering (2020, 2022), autonomous emergency braking (2020, 2022), and V2x (2024). However, this initiative is partially encapsulated in the ASEAN NCAP Roadmap 2021-2025 under – 'Safety Assist' technological feature. For instance, in the new roadmap, ASEAN NCAP only focuses on Auto Emergency Braking (AEB) technology. This AEB is a feature to alert drivers to an imminent crash and help them use the car's maximum capacity. Therefore, as benchmarked to the EURO NCAP, this paper comprehensively reviews the AES demand, assessments, control, and testing methodology and can be further developed to consolidate for the ASEAN NCAP safety rating schemes.