ROOct 15, 2018

Pedestrian Dominance Modeling for Socially-Aware Robot Navigation

arXiv:1810.06613v231 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses socially-aware navigation for robots interacting with pedestrians, but it is incremental as it builds on known psychological principles.

The paper tackled the problem of enabling socially-aware robot navigation by modeling pedestrian dominance characteristics, achieving ~85% accuracy in predicting dominance levels from trajectories.

We present a Pedestrian Dominance Model (PDM) to identify the dominance characteristics of pedestrians for robot navigation. Through a perception study on a simulated dataset of pedestrians, PDM models the perceived dominance levels of pedestrians with varying motion behaviors corresponding to trajectory, speed, and personal space. At runtime, we use PDM to identify the dominance levels of pedestrians to facilitate socially-aware navigation for the robots. PDM can predict dominance levels from trajectories with ~85% accuracy. Prior studies in psychology literature indicate that when interacting with humans, people are more comfortable around people that exhibit complementary movement behaviors. Our algorithm leverages this by enabling the robots to exhibit complementing responses to pedestrian dominance. We also present an application of PDM for generating dominance-based collision-avoidance behaviors in the navigation of autonomous vehicles among pedestrians. We demonstrate the benefits of our algorithm for robots navigating among tens of pedestrians in simulated environments.

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