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Virtual homologation of an ALKS according to UNECE R157 | Co-authored by White paper Abstract Proving that an automated driving risk is acceptable requires extensive investigation into the challenge of handling real-world traffic. UNECE R157 is the first regulation to formalise the idea of virtualising major parts of the validation and homologation process. This white paper discusses a recommended process for the virtual homologation of an Automated Lane Keeping System (ALKS) by following the provisions in UNECE R157, including test approaches to prove system safety. TÜV SÜD Contents INTRODUCTION 3 PROVING SYSTEM SAFETY 6 RELIABILITY OF SIMULATION RESULTS 10 CONCLUSION 14 About TÜV SÜD expert Christoph Miethaner Test Methods Engineer for Highly Automated Driving at TÜV SÜD Christoph is an automated driving specialist with four years of industry experience and participates in various committees that promote the advancement of these complex automotive technologies. He is a member of the openSCENARIO working committee which focuses on the virtual development, test and validation of driver assistance functions, automated and autonomous driving. He is also a member of the committee ISO/TC22/SC33/ WG09 for test scenarios of automated driving systems, and DIN NA 052-00-33-09 AK, which is the national mirror committee of ISO/TC22/SC33/WG09. He is a member of the Methods, Models and Effectiveness Calculation working committee at P.E.A.R.S (Prospective Effectiveness Assessment for Road Safety), and represents the international not-for-profit association CITA (international motor vehicle inspection committee) at UNECE VMAD (Informal Working Group on Validation Methods for Automated Driving at United Nations Economic Commission for Europe). About dSPACE expert Jann-Eve Stavesand Head of dSPACE Consulting Jann-Eve supports customers worldwide to define test strategies for complex automotive systems, helping them to overcome the challenges of developing safety-critical systems. He is a specialist in testing and quality assurance of complex automotive software and systems, including their approval and homologation. He sits on various standards committees in Germany and was involved in the development of ISO 26262:2018 - "Road vehicles – Functional safety", focusing on the software and processes elements. He is also involved with the standardisation of Safety of the Intended Functionality (SOTIF). 2 Virtual homologation of an ALKS according to UNECE R157 | TÜV SÜD Introduction The high complexity of an automated Proving that a risk is acceptable According to these guidelines, driving task has prompted the idea requires extensive investigation into simulation plays a crucial role for of virtualising major parts of the the challenge of handling real-world safety argumentation. Validating validation and homologation traffic. Currently, the prevailing certain safety measures by simulation process. UNECE regulation R157, opinion among experts is that this task means that it must also be proven for the approval of vehicles with can only be performed on a virtual why the results of the simulation are ALKS, is the first regulation to basis. Therefore, several types of reliable. The section “Reliability of formalise these ideas. The authors testing are required (from simulation simulation results” gives an overview of UNECE R157 not only defined to real-world tests, see figure below). of the different methods to achieve a fixed set of test cases, but also The following sections describe trustworthiness of a virtual test setup. augmented the prescribed set of the virtual evaluation method used In addition, we compared simulated tests by making it a requirement to to determine whether a risk is traffic situations with equivalent achieve higher-level principles, such acceptable for an ALKS, as per the real-world test drives to analyse the as acceptable risk. UNECE R157 guidelines. accuracy of the simulation. CERTIFICATION AND SAFETY ARGUMENT PROCESS AND BASIS FOR VERIFICATION Argument for certification authorities Regulations Argument for safety Methods Verification results Exploration of unknown Field observationT Selection Selection rustworthiness KPI Scenario catalogue Verification Validation Scenario approach Test management framework (end-to-end) ODD Design Test execution plan / V&V Strategy Risk Analysis TÜV SÜD | Virtual homologation of an ALKS according to UNECE R157 3 Status quo – ALKS UNECE R157 A key aspect of UNECE R157 that which defines the same term as Compared to the traditional is unique to the regulatory and “risk judged to be unacceptable in homologation process, where standardisation framework is the a certain context according to valid real-world test drives at the end definition of a reasonable risk. societal moral concepts,” UNECE of the development process form UNECE R157 Annex 4 Clause 2.16. R157 redefines the threshold for an the basis for homologation, UNECE defines an unreasonable risk as acceptable risk to a comparison that R157 demands independent audits “[...] the overall level of risk for can be measured and argued to a of relevant processes and their the driver, vehicle occupants and certain degree. This is a key enabler implementation. Furthermore, other road users which is increased for the approval of vehicles with several assessments are required compared to a competently and higher levels of automation, since throughout the product lifecycle. For carefully driven manual vehicle.” it acknowledges the presences of a details, refer to the figure below [1]. Compared to existing sources, such residual risk and provides guidance as ISO 26262-1:2018 Clause 3.176, on how this risk can be quantified. CONCEPT FOR CERTIFICATION – THE THREE PILLARS: PHASES OF TYPE APPROVAL MAIN POINTS FOR CERTIFICATION Real-world ■ Overall impression of system test drive behaviour on public roads ■ Assessment of system's ability to cope with real-world traffic ■ Validation of audit/assessment Physical results with real-world behaviour certification ■ Assessment of system behaviour in tests fixed set of challenging cases ■ It is possible to reproduce situations ■ Audit of development process and Audit V&V strategies ■ Assessment of safety concept (functional safety, safety of use) Assessment and measures taken ■ Use of simulation results Simulation ■ Measuring process maturity 4 Virtual homologation of an ALKS according to UNECE R157 | TÜV SÜD
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