Preprint Journal Article

PaniCar: Securing the Perception of Advanced Driving Assistance Systems Against Emergency Vehicle Lighting

Publication Date

May 8, 2025

Author(s)

Elad Feldman, Jacob Shams, Dudi Biton, Qi Alfred Chen, Shaoyuan Xie, Satoru Koda, Yisroel Mirsky, Asaf Shabtai, Yuval Elovici, Ben Nassi

Abstract

The safety of autonomous cars has come under scrutiny in recent years, especially after 16 documented incidents involving Teslas (with autopilot engaged) crashing into parked emergency vehicles (police cars, ambulances, and firetrucks). While previous studies have revealed that strong light sources often introduce flare artifacts in the captured image, which degrade the image quality, the impact of flare on object detection performance remains unclear. In this research, we unveil PaniCar, a digital phenomenon that causes an object detector’s confidence score to fluctuate below detection thresholds when exposed to activated emergency vehicle lighting. This vulnerability poses a significant safety risk, and can cause autonomous vehicles to fail to detect objects near emergency vehicles. In addition, this vulnerability could be exploited by adversaries to compromise the security of advanced driving assistance systems (ADASs). We assess seven commercial ADASs (Tesla Model 3, “manufacturer C”, HP, Pelsee, AZDOME, Imagebon, Rexing), four object detectors (YOLO, SSD, RetinaNet, Faster R-CNN), and 14 patterns of emergency vehicle lighting to understand the influence of various technical and environmental factors. We also evaluate four SOTA flare removal methods and show that their performance and latency are insufficient for real-time driving constraints. To mitigate this risk, we propose Caracetamol, a robust framework designed to enhance the resilience of object detectors against the effects of activated emergency vehicle lighting. Our evaluation shows that on YOLOv3 and Faster RCNN, Caracetamol improves the models’ average confidence of car detection by 0.20, the lower confidence bound by 0.33, and reduces the fluctuation range by 0.33. In addition, Caracetamol is capable of processing frames at a rate of between 30-50 FPS, enabling real-time ADAS car detection.

Suggested Citation
Elad Feldman, Jacob Shams, Dudi Biton, Alfred Chen, Shaoyuan Xie, Satoru Koda, Yisroel Mirsky, Asaf Shabtai, Yuval Elovici and Ben Nassi (2025) “PaniCar: Securing the Perception of Advanced Driving Assistance Systems Against Emergency Vehicle Lighting”. arXiv. Available at: 10.48550/arXiv.2505.05183.

published journal article

Development of methodology to design advanced traffic surveillance systems for traffic information based on Or­i­gin-Des­tin­a­tion

Transportation Research Record

Publication Date

January 1, 2005
Suggested Citation
Cheol Oh and Stephen G. Ritchie (2005) “Development of methodology to design advanced traffic surveillance systems for traffic information based on Or­i­gin-Des­tin­a­tion”, Transportation Research Record, 1935(1), pp. 37–46. Available at: 10.1177/0361198105193500105.

research report

A Review of Data Systems to Track Zero-Emission Truck Adoption and Suggestions for Future Improvements

Publication Date

July 21, 2025

Author(s)

Marshall Miller, Lewis Fulton

Research Report

UC-ITS-RIMI-3D

Areas of Expertise

Abstract

To guide databases that track progress on the uptake and use of zero emission trucks and buses, this project identified types of data that should be collected on a regular basis and compiled in a repository, preferably with public access. Funding will need to be identified to support this effort on an on-going basis. Data recommended for collection include those related to vehicles, infrastructure, projections, funding, the spatial location of charging power demand as a function of time, and exemptions from regulations that require fleets to purchase zero-emissions trucks and buses. These data recommendations were developed in part from conversations with staff at California agencies, such as the California Energy Commission and Air Resources Board, and with individuals working on the Alliance for Renewable Clean Hydrogen Energy Systems (ARCHES) hydrogen hub. The recommendations are evolving and could continue to evolve once data collection has begun.

Suggested Citation
Marshall Miller and Lewis Fulton (2025) A Review of Data Systems to Track Zero-Emission Truck Adoption and Suggestions for Future Improvements. Research Report UC-ITS-RIMI-3D. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g27s7m49.

conference paper

Performance characterization of an indoor localization system with LTE code and carrier phase measurements and an IMU

2019 international conference on indoor positioning and indoor navigation (IPIN)

Publication Date

September 1, 2019

Author(s)

Ali Abdallah, Kimia Shamaei, Zaher Kassas

Abstract

The Performance of cellular long-term evolution (LTE) signals for indoor localization is evaluated. Two different designs of LTE software-defined receivers (SDRs), namely a code phase-based receiver and a carrier phase-based receiver, are presented and assessed experimentally indoors with LTE signals. A base/navigator framework is presented to deal with the unknown clock biases of the LTE eNodeBs. In this framework, the base receiver is placed outdoors, has knowledge of its own position, and makes pseudorange measurements to eNodeBs in the environment whose positions are known. The base transmits these pseudoranges to the indoor navigating receiver, which is also making pseudorange measurements to the same eNodeBs. The navigating receiver differences the base’s and navigator’s pseudoranges; hence, the unknown eNodeBs’ biases are eliminated. The navigator receiver is equipped with an inertial measurement unit (IMU), and the LTE pseudoranges and IMU measurements are tightly coupled using an extended Kalman filter (EKF). Two sets of experimental results are presented. First, it is demonstrated that the standalone carrier phase-based receiver yielded a more precise navigation solution than the code phase-based receiver, specifically a two-dimensional (2-D) position root mean-squared error (RMSE) of 5.09 m versus 11.76 m for an indoor trajectory of 109 m traversed in 50 seconds. Second, it is demonstrated that coupling the IMU with the carrier phase-based LTE receiver reduced the 2-D position RMSE to 2.92 m. Moreover, it is demonstrated that the proposed LTE-IMU system yielded a maximum error of 5.60 compared to 22.53 m for the IMU-only.

Suggested Citation
Ali A. Abdallah, Kimia Shamaei and Zaher M. Kassas (2019) “Performance characterization of an indoor localization system with LTE code and carrier phase measurements and an IMU”, in 2019 international conference on indoor positioning and indoor navigation (IPIN). IEEE (International conference on indoor positioning and indoor navigation). Available at: 10.1109/ipin.2019.8911791.

Phd Dissertation

Of Planes, Trains And Automobiles: Market Structure And Incentives For A More Efficient, Cleaner And Fairer Transportation System

Publication Date

January 1, 2011

Author(s)

Abstract

The unifying theme of this dissertation’s three applications of economics to transportation is an attempt to make transportation more efficient, environmentally friendlier and fairer. In my first essay, I apply game theory and the notion of Cournot equilibrium to transportation. I compare two networks, hub-and-spoke and a point-to-point network, which is served by two non-cooperative transportation firms. I find that the way in which two firms set their respective network, either direct indirect service, has an effect on their costs and profits. In my second essay, I analyze the ownership of hybrid electric vehicles by U.S. households using the 2009 National Household Travel Survey to understand the impact of various government policies aimed at increasing hybrid vehicle ownership, such as granting access to high-occupancy vehicle lanes, tax credits, and parking incentives. I use a logit model; explanatory variables include socio-economic characteristics, along with urban form, as well as policy variables. Understanding which policies are most cost-effective at fostering HEV ownership would allow policy makers to make effective use of public resources. 2 In my third essay, I address equity in transportation by stratifying the NHTS into three income groups: low-income, middle-income and upper-income. The purpose is to determine whether income affects travel behavior. I analyze questions in the 2009 NHTS that were not available in previous NHTS surveys. These questions inquire about internet use, medical condition and physical activity. I also estimate a series of logit models and find that those living in poverty and who report having a medical condition are more likely to make medical trips. Upper-income individuals are more likely to report social and recreational trips, meal and trips labeled as “other.” Analyzing trips by income is important from an equity standpoint when allocating scarce public funds for transportation projects, since it tells us what income groups are likely to be affected by specific transportation projects.

Suggested Citation
Roberto Ayala (2011) Of Planes, Trains And Automobiles: Market Structure And Incentives For A More Efficient, Cleaner And Fairer Transportation System. Ph.D.. University of California, Irvine. Available at: https://uci.primo.exlibrisgroup.com/permalink/01CDL_IRV_INST/17uq3m8/alma991011993819704701.

conference paper

A Generalized Diffusion Model for Preference and Response Time: Application to Ordering Mobility-on- Demand Services

100th Transportation Research Board (TRB) Annual Meeting

Publication Date

January 1, 2021
Suggested Citation
Jiangbo Yu and Michael F. Hyland (2021) “A Generalized Diffusion Model for Preference and Response Time: Application to Ordering Mobility-on- Demand Services”. 100th Transportation Research Board (TRB) Annual Meeting, Washington, DC.

policy brief

Job Access, Agency Cost, and VMT Impacts of Offering Microtransit alongside Fixed-route Transit

Abstract

Public transit ridership has declined in major US cities over the past decade. Integrating traditional fixed-route transit with flexible microtransit has been proposed to enhance ridership, mobility, accessibility, and sustainability. This project surveyed California transit agencies on their microtransit services to identify challenges to integrating them with fixed-route services. An agent-based model combining the two modes of transit was developed to evaluate different operational designs. FleetPy, an open-source simulation tool, modeled microtransit dynamics. The study examined design impacts, such as fixed route headways and microtransit fleet size, in downtown San Diego and Lemon Grove, California. Results showed that while microtransit reduces fixed-route ridership and requires higher subsidies, it significantly boosts job accessibility.

Suggested Citation
Michael Hyland, Susan Pike, Siwei Hu, Jacob Berkel, Yan Xing, Ritun Saha, Geoffrey Vander Veen and Dingtong Yang (2024) Job Access, Agency Cost, and VMT Impacts of Offering Microtransit alongside Fixed-route Transit. Policy Brief UC-ITS-RIMI-4I. UC ITS. Available at: https://doi.org/10.7922/g2th8k2w.

conference paper

Anticipatory Fleet Operation for Shared-use Autonomous Mobility Services with Learning-based Vehicle Repositioning

102nd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board

Publication Date

January 1, 2023

Author(s)

Monika Filipovska, Michael Hyland
Suggested Citation
Monika Filipovska and Michael F. Hyland (2023) “Anticipatory Fleet Operation for Shared-use Autonomous Mobility Services with Learning-based Vehicle Repositioning”. 102nd Annual Meeting of the Transportation Research Board.

conference paper

Exploring scenarios for the introduction of freight trams in Barcelona

Proceedings of 91st annual meeting of the transportation research board, washington, DC

Publication Date

January 1, 2012

Author(s)

Robert Regue, A.L. Bristow
Suggested Citation
R. Regué and A.L. Bristow (2012) “Exploring scenarios for the introduction of freight trams in Barcelona”, in Proceedings of 91st annual meeting of the transportation research board, washington, DC.