Learning from Human Naturalistic Driving Behavior at Stop Signs for Autonomous Vehicles 2019-01-1021
Despite public expectations that autonomous vehicles should be able to avoid most accidents, the existing fleet of autonomous test vehicles has demonstrated this is simply not the case. An explanation for some of these accidents has been that these vehicles do not drive like humans and therefore do not exhibit certain driving patterns expected by human drivers. With the high likelihood of a gradual integration of autonomous vehicles into our traffic system in the future, there will be a need for such vehicles to adapt to, and mimic, human driving. Although much work has been done to understand human behavior and performance in driving, it has been mostly geared towards defining human capabilities and limitations. Little work has been done on the interactions between human-driven and autonomous vehicles. In previously published work, we described a large-scale, on-road eye tracking study conducted in instrumented test vehicles to understand and assess human behavior in a naturalistic driving environment. Here we describe one condition from that study, approaching and proceeding through stop-sign-controlled intersections, in the context of applying our work to the development of autonomous vehicles. We investigated naturalistic driver behavior at stop signs based on vehicle dynamics. In particular, we obtained deceleration rates, stopping/slowing speeds, stopping/slowing durations and acceleration rates while participants drove specific routes in Los Angeles. We also found and quantified clear evidence of “California Rolls” for many drivers. We suggest that data such as that presented in this paper can be incorporated into autonomous systems such that they behave more like human drivers (e.g. to avoid rear-end accidents), as well as to better predict human driving behaviors (e.g. “California Rolls” and very short stops).
Citation: Tavassoli, A., Cymbalist, N., Dunning, A., and Krauss, D., "Learning from Human Naturalistic Driving Behavior at Stop Signs for Autonomous Vehicles," SAE Technical Paper 2019-01-1021, 2019, https://doi.org/10.4271/2019-01-1021. Download Citation
Author(s):
Abtine Tavassoli, Niccolo Cymbalist, Amber Dunning, David Krauss
Affiliated:
Exponent, Inc.
Pages: 5
Event:
WCX SAE World Congress Experience
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Related Topics:
Autonomous vehicles
Driver behavior
Vehicle dynamics /flight dynamics
Vehicle drivers
Fleets
Vehicle acceleration
Education and training
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