Publication

Modeling driver control behavior in both routine and near-accident driving

Building on ideas from contemporary neuroscience, a framework is proposed in which drivers’ steering and pedal behavior is modeled as a series of individual control adjustments, triggered after accumulation of sensory evidence for the need of an adjustment, or evidence that a previous or ongoing adjustment is not achieving the intended results. Example simulations are provided. Specifically, it is shown that evidence accumulation can account for previously unexplained variance in looming detection thresholds and brake onset timing. It is argued that the proposed framework resolves a discrepancy in the current driver modeling literature, by explaining not only the short-latency, well-tuned, closed-loop type of control of routine driving, but also the degradation into long-latency, ill-tuned open-loop control in more rare, unexpected, and urgent situations such as near-accidents.

Author(s)
Gustav Markkula
Research area
Systems for accident prevention and AD
Publication type
Conference paper
Published in
Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting Proceedings, 58, pp. 879-883
Project
QUADRA - Quantitative Driver Behavior Modeling for Active Safety Assessment
Year of publication
2014