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Drive Cycle Recognition (abbr. DCR) is an advanced vehicle control strategy that uses past driving information, as well as a library of representative drive cycles to extrapolate future vehicle control parameters.[1] For example, the vehicle computer can identify past driving history as one particular representative cycle (say, FTP-75) and use known information from FTP-75 to improve vehicle performance. This type of control strategy is most useful for hybrid vehicles where the control strategy has a much greater effect on vehicle performance than with a regular internal combustion engine driven vehicle.
Identification techniques can be as simple as numerical error calculations (such as Mean squared error) or as complex as a self-organizing competitive neural network.
References
[edit]- ^ "Vehicle Simulation". udel.edu. Retrieved March 9, 2026.
External links
[edit]- Abdollahi, Arezoo; Nikravesh, S.K.; Menha, M.B. (2007). "An Intelligent Control Strategy in a Parallel Hybrid Vehicle". Journal of Iranian Association of Electrical and Electronics Engineers. 4(2).
