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External communication of automated vehicles in mixed traffic: Addressing the right human interaction partner in multi-agent simulation
Institution:1. University of Freiburg, Department of Psychology, Engelbertstraße 41, 79085 Freiburg, Germany;2. Dr. Ing. h.c. F. Porsche AG, Porschestr. 911, 71287 Weissach, Germany;1. Department of Cognitive Robotics, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the Netherlands;1. Technische Universität Braunschweig, Department of Traffic and Engineering Psychology, Gaußstraße 23, 38106 Braunschweig, Germany;2. German Insurers Accident Research, Wilhelmstraße 43/43G, 10117 Berlin, Germany;1. Daimler AG, Leibnizstr. 2, 71032 Böblingen, Germany;2. Ulm University, Dept. Human Factors, Albert-Einstein-Allee 41, 89081 Ulm, Germany
Abstract:The urban traffic system is most likely to change in the next years to a mixed traffic with human drivers, vulnerable road users, and automated vehicles. In the past, the development of external communication approaches for automated vehicles focused on scenarios where an automated vehicle communicates with either a pedestrian or a human driver. However, interactions with more than one traffic partner are more realistic. Therefore, a study with 42 participants was conducted with a multi-agent simulation in which an automated vehicle interacted simultaneously with two participants, a pedestrian and a driver of a manual vehicle. In this study, two main scenarios were investigated in order to evaluate the safety and efficiency of the interactions and to determine whether the human road users feel correctly addressed. In one scenario, the pedestrian had to cross the road in front of the automated and the manual vehicle, which were approaching from different sides. In the other, the manual vehicle had to drive through a bottleneck in front of the oncoming automated vehicle, while the pedestrian had to cross the road after both vehicles passed. The communication approach of the automated vehicle consisted of implicit signals using a speed profile and lateral offset within its lane, and explicit signals using an external human–machine interface. The results of the study show that no collisions were observed in terms of safety and no significant negative effects on efficiency were measured. However, in contrast to single agent interactions, a majority of participants felt wrongly addressed in situations where the automated vehicle signals the right-of-way to the other human road user. It can be concluded that the communication approach of the automated vehicle needs to be modified in order to address certain road users more clearly.
Keywords:Automated driving  External HMI  Mixed traffic  Movement design  Multi-agent simulation  Road bottleneck scenario
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