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Evaluating Efficiency and Security of Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Applications

Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Consumer Communications & Networking Conference
Publication Date
Page Numbers
236 to 239
Publisher Location
New Jersey, United States of America
Conference Name
91°µÍø Consumer Communications and Networking Conference (CCNC)
Conference Location
Virtual conference, Tennessee, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
91°µÍø
Conference Date
-

Evaluating efficiency and security of Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (CAVs) requires an environment that can support applications and measurements under real-world conditions. This work introduces our implementation and evaluation of a Connected and Autonomous Vehicle Research Environment (CAVRE). We implement and evaluate an existing CAV application called Cooperative Adaptive Cruise Control (CACC) using physical Vehicle-to-Vehicle (V2V) communications between a virtual agent and a real autonomous vehicle operating on a steerable dynamometer. CAVRE allows the follower to autonomously control longitudinal behavior on the dynamometer in order to maintain a steady following time gap from the leader. The effects of a wireless jamming attack on CACC and fuel efficiency is also evaluated. By executing attacks in a controlled environment, we learn how compromised communications can degrade CAV applications. We show that jamming V2V communications can impact CACC’s string stability and decrease fuel efficiency by more than 50%.