Towards Runtime Monitoring of Complex System Requirements for Autonomous Driving Functions

Dominik Grundt
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)
Anna Köhne
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)
Ishan Saxena
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)
Ralf Stemmer
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)
Bernd Westphal
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)
Eike Möhlmann
(German Aerospace Center, Institute of Systems Engineering for Future Mobility)

Autonomous driving functions (ADFs) in public traffic have to comply with complex system requirements that are based on knowledge of experts from different disciplines, e.g., lawyers, safety experts, psychologists. In this paper, we present a research preview regarding the validation of ADFs with respect to such requirements. We investigate the suitability of Traffic Sequence Charts (TSCs) for the formalization of such requirements and present a concept for monitoring system compliance during validation runs. We find TSCs, with their intuitive visual syntax over symbols from the traffic domain, to be a promising choice for the collaborative formalization of such requirements. For an example TSC, we describe the construction of a runtime monitor according to our novel concept that exploits the separation of spatial and temporal aspects in TSCs, and successfully apply the monitor on exemplary runs. The monitor continuously provides verdicts at runtime, which is particularly beneficial in ADF validation, where validation runs are expensive. The next open research questions concern the generalization of our monitor construction, the identification of the limits of TSC monitorability, and the investigation of the monitor's performance in practical applications. Perspectively, TSC runtime monitoring could provide a useful technique in other emerging application areas such as AI training, safeguarding ADFs during operation, and gathering meaningful traffic data in the field.

In Matt Luckcuck and Marie Farrell: Proceedings Fourth International Workshop on Formal Methods for Autonomous Systems (FMAS) and Fourth International Workshop on Automated and verifiable Software sYstem DEvelopment (ASYDE) (FMAS2022 ASYDE2022), Berlin, Germany, 26th and 27th of September 2022, Electronic Proceedings in Theoretical Computer Science 371, pp. 53–61.
Published: 27th September 2022.

ArXived at: https://dx.doi.org/10.4204/EPTCS.371.4 bibtex PDF
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