Highlights Estimation of road profiles and classes using neural networks on measured data. Discrete obstacles are reconstructed with higher correlation than Belgian pave. Ride comfort mode has better quality in reconstructed profiles than handling mode. Consistently good approximations of DSDs occur between 0.2 and 1.8 cycles/m.
AbstractThis paper reports the performance of an Artificial Neural Network based road condition monitoring methodology on measured data obtained from a Land RoverDefender 110 which was driven over discrete obstacles and Belgian paving. In a previous study it was demonstrated, using data calculated from a numerical model, that the neural network was able to reconstruct road profiles and their associated defects within good levels of fitting accuracy and correlation. A nonlinear autoregressive network with exogenous inputs was trained in a series-parallel framework. When compared to the parallel framework, the series-parallel framework offered the advantage of fast training but had a shortcoming in that it required feed-forward of true road profiles. In this study, the true profiles are not available and the test data are obtained from field measurements. Training data are numerically generated by making minor adjustments to the real measured profiles and applying them to a full vehicle 2 model of the Land Rover. This is done to avoid using the same road profile and acceleration data for training and testing or validating the neural network. A static feedforward neural network is trained and consequently tested on the real measured data.The results show very good correlations over both the discrete obstacles and the Belgian paving. The random nature of the Belgian paving necessitated correlations to be made using their displacement spectral densities as well as evaluations of RMS error percent values of the raw road profiles. The use of displacement spectral densities is considered to be of much more practical value than the road profiles since they can easily be interpreted into road roughness measures by plotting them over an internationally recognized standard roughness scale.
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