Toyota Research Institute & Stanford Drift Autonomous Supras

The drifting was used to help develop techniques for autonomous driving systems...

Toyota Research Institute (TRI) and Stanford Engineering announced a first in driving research when they autonomously drifted two Toyota Supras in tandem. Watch the video below:  

For nearly seven years, the teams have collaborated on research to make driving safer. By adding a second car drifting in tandem, the teams simulated dynamic conditions where cars must respond quickly to other vehicles, pedestrians and cyclists.

“Our researchers came together with one goal in mind – how to make driving safer,” said Avinash Balachandran, vice president of TRI’s human interactive driving division. “Utilizing the latest tools in AI, we can drift two cars in tandem autonomously. It is the most complex maneuver in motorsports, and reaching this milestone has far-reaching implications for building advanced safety systems into automobiles.”

In an autonomous tandem drifting sequence, two vehicles—a lead car and a chase car—navigate a course at times within inches of each other while operating at the edge of control. The team used modern techniques to build the vehicle’s AI, including a neural network tire model that allowed it to learn from experience, much like an expert driver.

“The track conditions can change dramatically over a few minutes when the sun goes down,” said Chris Gerdes, professor of mechanical engineering and co-director of the Center for Automotive Research at Stanford (CARS). “The AI we developed for this project learns from every trip we have taken to the track to handle this variation.”

“When your car begins to skid or slide, you rely solely on your driving skills to avoid colliding with another vehicle, tree, or obstacle. An average driver struggles to manage these extreme circumstances, and a split second can mean the difference between life and death,” added Balachandran. “This new technology can kick in precisely in time to safeguard a driver and manage a loss of control, just as an expert drifter would.

Technical Details:

Overhead time lapse image of the Supras drifting.
Exit mobile version