HCApr 8, 2019

Eye Contact Between Pedestrians and Drivers

arXiv:1904.04188v130 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This challenges a common assumption in pedestrian safety and human-vehicle interaction, with implications for autonomous vehicle design and traffic psychology.

The study tackled the belief that pedestrians make eye contact with drivers before crossing, showing that over 90% cannot see the driver at 30m or determine gaze at 15m, meaning most crossing decisions are based on vehicle kinematics alone.

When asked, a majority of people believe that, as pedestrians, they make eye contact with the driver of an approaching vehicle when making their crossing decisions. This work presents evidence that this widely held belief is false. We do so by showing that, in majority of cases where conflict is possible, pedestrians begin crossing long before they are able to see the driver through the windshield. In other words, we are able to circumvent the very difficult question of whether pedestrians choose to make eye contact with drivers, by showing that whether they think they do or not, they can't. Specifically, we show that over 90\% of people in representative lighting conditions cannot determine the gaze of the driver at 15m and see the driver at all at 30m. This means that, for example, that given the common city speed limit of 25mph, more than 99% of pedestrians would have begun crossing before being able to see either the driver or the driver's gaze. In other words, from the perspective of the pedestrian, in most situations involving an approaching vehicle, the crossing decision is made by the pedestrian solely based on the kinematics of the vehicle without needing to determine that eye contact was made by explicitly detecting the eyes of the driver.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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