Abstract:Accurate inter-vehicle distance estimation is a cornerstone of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) and autonomous driving. While LiDAR and radar provide high precision, their high cost prohibits widespread adoption in mass-market vehicles. Monocular camera-based estimation offers a low-cost alternative but suffers from fundamental scale ambiguity. Recent deep learning methods for monocular depth achieve impressive results yet require expensive supervised training, suffer from domain shift, and produce predictions that are difficult to certify for safety-critical deployment. This paper presents a framework that exploits the standardized typography of United States license plates as passive fiducial markers for metric ranging, resolving scale ambiguity through explicit geometric priors without any training data or active illumination. First, a four-method parallel plate detector achieves robust plate reading across the full automotive lighting range. Second, a three-stage state identification engine fusing OCR text matching, multi-design color scoring, and a lightweight neural network classifier provides robust identification across all ambient conditions. Third, hybrid depth fusion with inverse-variance weighting and online scale alignment, combined with a one-dimensional constant-velocity Kalman filter, delivers smoothed distance, relative velocity, and time-to-collision for collision warning. Baseline validation reproduces a 2.3% coefficient of variation in character height measurements and a 36% reduction in distance-estimate variance compared with plate-width methods from prior work. Extensive outdoor experiments confirm a mean absolute error of 2.3% at 10 m and continuous distance output during brief plate occlusions, outperforming deep learning baselines by a factor of five in relative error.
Abstract:Accurate inter-vehicle distance estimation is a cornerstone of advanced driver assistance systems and autonomous driving. While LiDAR and radar provide high precision, their cost prohibits widespread adoption in mass-market vehicles. Monocular vision offers a low-cost alternative but suffers from scale ambiguity and sensitivity to environmental disturbances. This paper introduces a typography-based monocular distance estimation framework, which exploits the standardized typography of license plates as passive fiducial markers for metric distance estimation. The core geometric module uses robust plate detection and character segmentation to measure character height and computes distance via the pinhole camera model. The system incorporates interactive calibration, adaptive detection with strict and permissive modes, and multi-method character segmentation leveraging both adaptive and global thresholding. To enhance robustness, the framework further includes camera pose compensation using lane-based horizon estimation, hybrid deep-learning fusion, temporal Kalman filtering for velocity estimation, and multi-feature fusion that exploits additional typographic cues such as stroke width, character spacing, and plate border thickness. Experimental validation with a calibrated monocular camera in a controlled indoor setup achieved a coefficient of variation of 2.3% in character height across consecutive frames and a mean absolute error of 7.7%. The framework operates without GPU acceleration, demonstrating real-time feasibility. A comprehensive comparison with a plate-width based method shows that character-based ranging reduces the standard deviation of estimates by 35%, translating to smoother, more consistent distance readings in practice, where erratic estimates could trigger unnecessary braking or acceleration.