Publication Detail

Modeling the Manually Controlled Bicycle

UCD-ITS-RP-12-131

Journal Article

BicyclingPlus Research Collaborative

Suggested Citation:
Hess, Ronald A., Jason Moore, Mont Hubbard (2012)

Modeling the Manually Controlled Bicycle

. IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man, and Cybernetics - Part A: Systems and Humans 42 (3), 545 - 557

A control-theoretic model of the bicycle rider is developed. The model has its origins in pilot modeling efforts previously reported in the literature. A handling-quality metric that was employed in pilot/vehicle analysis is adopted for use in estimating the task-independent handling qualities of bicycles. The resulting model is parameterized by five gains, two fixed second-order filters, and a preview time. Analysis and computer simulation of the rider/bicycle system are undertaken using six linear models of existing bicycles at three different velocities. The rider's task consisted of a 2-m lane-change maneuver and return. Lane tracking performance was comparable for all bicycles at each velocity. Distinct variations in estimated handling-quality levels were evident in the analysis that indicated that bicycle velocities, rather than differences in the bicycles themselves, dominated the handling-quality predictions. A brief discussion of a rider control model for hands-free riding and a possible approach for model identification concludes this paper.


Key words:

bicycles, humans, vehicle dynamics, transfer functions, computational modeling, human factors, bicycle dynamics, human operator modeling, manual control