Inadequate contrast ratio of road markings as an indicator for ADAS failure
Novel Certad, Cristina Olaverri-Monreal, Friedrich Wiesinger, Tomasz, E. Burghardt

TL;DR
This study investigates how low contrast ratios of road markings affect ADAS lane recognition failures, highlighting the importance of contrast for reliable vehicle automation under various visibility conditions.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of contrast ratios of different road markings and their impact on ADAS performance across diverse visibility scenarios.
Findings
Type II road markings have higher contrast ratios than Type I.
Poor contrast ratios correlate with lane recognition failures.
Rain and wet conditions significantly reduce contrast ratios.
Abstract
Road markings were reported as critical road safety features, equally needed for both human drivers and for machine vision technologies utilised by advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS) and in driving automation. Visibility of road markings is achieved because of their colour contrasting with the roadway surface. During recent testing of an open-source camera-based ADAS under several visibility conditions (day, night, rain, glare), significant failures in trajectory planning were recorded and quantified. Consistently, better ADAS reliability under poor visibility conditions was achieved with Type II road markings (i.e. structured markings, facilitating moisture drainage) as compared to Type I road marking (i.e. flat lines). To further understand these failures, analysis of contrast ratio of road markings, which the tested ADAS was detecting for traffic lane recognition, was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSafety Warnings and Signage
