A unified vehicle trajectory prediction model using multi-level context-aware graph attention mechanism
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Date
2024
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Publisher
Springer
Abstract
Predicting the mobility patterns of vehicles together with their interactions among surrounding traffic objects is a critical task in autonomous driving systems. Existing graph neural network-based trajectory prediction models primarily capture the structural connectivity of network nodes (road objects) and assume equal priority to all neighbors of a node. However, in real-time traffic networks, the behavior of each vehicle is significantly influenced by its neighboring road objects and this influence is not uniform. This necessitates a neighbor interaction-aware trajectory prediction model that assumes non-uniform priority among neighboring nodes. In this article, we have designed a novel unified trajectory prediction model which is suitable for both highway and urban traffic conditions. The proposed approach seamlessly integrates multi-level context modeling using graph attention mechanisms, capturing and leveraging interactions and dependencies among objects at varied levels of proximity within a graph. Additionally, it employs an encoder–decoder long short-term memory architecture for long-term trajectory prediction, ensuring adaptability to different driving scenarios. The advanced graph attention mechanisms play a crucial role in modeling spatial dependencies between vehicles, allowing the proposed model to dynamically adapt to evolving interactions over time. The experimentations done on real-world trajectory datasets, namely, Next Generation Simulation US-101 highway dataset and diverse urban datasets such as ApolloScape and Argoverse demonstrate remarkable performance of MC-GATP in long-term trajectory prediction. The model showcases superior prediction accuracy, scalability, and computational efficiency for both highway and urban environments. © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2024.
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Keywords
Autonomous vehicles, Deep learning, Forecasting, Graph neural networks, Intelligent systems, Memory architecture, Roads and streets, Trajectories, Attention mechanisms, Autonomous driving, Data driven, Data-driven mobility model, Graph attention network, Intelligent transportation systems, Mobility modeling, Prediction modelling, Trajectory prediction, Computational efficiency
Citation
Journal of Supercomputing, 2024, 80, 17, pp. 25222-25255
