ROJul 2, 2021

Cooperative Autonomous Vehicles that Sympathize with Human Drivers

arXiv:2107.00898v157 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of autonomous vehicle adoption by improving coexistence with human drivers, though it is incremental as it builds on prior socially-aware navigation work.

The paper tackles the problem of enabling autonomous vehicles to safely and efficiently interact with human-driven vehicles in competitive scenarios by introducing altruistic behavior through social value orientation, resulting in significant improvements in safety and traffic flow metrics.

Widespread adoption of autonomous vehicles will not become a reality until solutions are developed that enable these intelligent agents to co-exist with humans. This includes safely and efficiently interacting with human-driven vehicles, especially in both conflictive and competitive scenarios. We build up on the prior work on socially-aware navigation and borrow the concept of social value orientation from psychology -- that formalizes how much importance a person allocates to the welfare of others -- in order to induce altruistic behavior in autonomous driving. In contrast with existing works that explicitly model the behavior of human drivers and rely on their expected response to create opportunities for cooperation, our Sympathetic Cooperative Driving (SymCoDrive) paradigm trains altruistic agents that realize safe and smooth traffic flow in competitive driving scenarios only from experiential learning and without any explicit coordination. We demonstrate a significant improvement in both safety and traffic-level metrics as a result of this altruistic behavior and importantly conclude that the level of altruism in agents requires proper tuning as agents that are too altruistic also lead to sub-optimal traffic flow. The code and supplementary material are available at: https://symcodrive.toghi.net/

Foundations

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