Reprint

Cooperative Connected and Automated Mobility (CCAM)

Technologies and Applications

Edited by
February 2020
128 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-158-9 (Paperback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-159-6 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Cooperative Connected and Automated Mobility (CCAM): Technologies and Applications that was published in

Computer Science & Mathematics
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Summary

Cooperative connected and automated mobility (CCAM) has the potential to reshape the transportation ecosystem in a revolutionary way. Transportation systems will be safer, more efficient and more comfortable. Cars are going to be the third living space, as passengers will have the freedom to use their car to live, work and travel. Despite the massive effort devoted, both by academia and industry, to developing connected and automated vehicles, there are still many issues to be addressed, including not only scientific and technological, but also regulatory and political issues. This book, mostly centered on the scientific and technological aspects of CCAMs, features seven articles highlighting recent advances of the state of the art in different CCAM technologies. Two papers address vehicular platooning, a key application for day-1 automated driving, other presents a scheme to improve the resource utilization of vehicular networks, while another paper addresses critical train communications, proposing an architecture based on 5G, SDN and MPTCP to provide path diversity and end-to-end redundancy. One paper describes the status of roadside deployment activities and analyzes the policies and practices of cooperative driving in the European Union. Finally, two review papers, one on congestion control techniques for VANETs and the other on fault tolerance techniques for vehicular networks, conclude the book.

Format
  • Paperback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
cooperative control; vehicular platoon; multi-agent system; communication delay; system decoupling; congestion control; V2V; VANET; cooperative driving; European framework; smart roads; C-ITS services; open-road pilot sites; vehicle to everything (V2X) testbeds; 5G; train-to-ground; software-defined networking; multipath TCP; adaptable; reliability; resiliency; path diversity; quality of service (QoS); vehicular networks (VNET); Mobile edge computing (MEC); multi-task scheduling (MTS); multi-objective optimization (MOO); upper bound; Pareto optimal solution; VANETs; IEEE 802.11p MAC; overlay TDMA; empirical models; wireless vehicular communications; systematic review; fault tolerance; dependability; n/a