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Human-like driving behaviour emerges from a risk-based driver model

Transportation

Human-like driving behaviour emerges from a risk-based driver model

S. Kolekar, J. D. Winter, et al.

Discover the innovative Driver's Risk Field (DRF) model that captures a driver's belief about event probabilities and estimates perceived risk, pioneering a new path in automated vehicle development. This groundbreaking research was conducted by Sarvesh Kolekar, Joost de Winter, and David Abbink.... show more
Abstract
Current driving behaviour models are designed for specific scenarios, such as curve driving, obstacle avoidance, car-following, or overtaking. However, humans can drive in diverse scenarios. Can we find an underlying principle from which driving behaviour in different scenarios emerges? We propose the Driver's Risk Field (DRF), a two-dimensional field that represents the driver's belief about the probability of an event occurring. The DRF, when multiplied with the consequence of the event, provides an estimate of the driver's perceived risk. Through human-in-the-loop and computer simulations, we show that human-like driving behaviour emerges when the DRF is coupled to a controller that maintains the perceived risk below a threshold-level. The DRF model predictions concur with driving behaviour reported in literature for seven different scenarios (curve radii, lane widths, obstacle avoidance, roadside furniture, car-following, overtaking, oncoming traffic). We conclude that our generalizable DRF model is scientifically satisfying and has applications in automated vehicles.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Sep 29, 2020
Authors
Sarvesh Kolekar, Joost de Winter, David Abbink
Tags
Driver's Risk Field
perceived risk
driving behavior
automated vehicles
human-in-the-loop simulations
event probabilities
controller
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