Analyzing the driving behavior of autonomous vehicles(AV)in mixed traffic conditions at urban intersections has become increasingly important for improving intersection design,providing infrastructure-based guidance i...Analyzing the driving behavior of autonomous vehicles(AV)in mixed traffic conditions at urban intersections has become increasingly important for improving intersection design,providing infrastructure-based guidance information,and developing capability-enhanced AV perception systems.This study investigated the contributing factors affecting AV driving behavior using theWaymo Open Dataset.Binarized autonomous driving stability metrics,derived via a kernel density estimation,served as the target variables for a random forest classification model.The model’s input variables included 15 factors divided into four types:intersection-related,surrounding object-related,road infrastructure-related,and time-of-day-related types.The random forest classification model was employed to identify the key factors affecting autonomous driving behavior.In addition,the identified factors were further ranked based on feature importance.SHAP analysis was utilized to enhance model interpretability by quantifying the contribution of each factor and identifying their directional impacts.The type of intersection factor was found to have an importance of 0.243 and was the most influential factor on autonomous driving behavior.On average,intersection-related factors had an importance of 0.196,which is approximately a 31.1%margin over the average importance of surrounding object-related factors.Additionally,the surrounding object-related factors that were collected through sensors on the autonomous vehicle had a high degree of feature importance,especially with the number of pedestrians having the highest importance(0.107)of the types of objects.The correlation between these findings can contribute to the development of various treatments to improvemore harmonized AVs’maneuvering with other road users and facilities in urban mixed traffic environments.展开更多
基金supported by Korea Institute of Police Technology(KIPoT)grant funded by the Korea government(KNPA)(Project Name:Development of Lv.4 Driving Ability Evaluation Technology for Autonomous Vehicles Based on Real Roads/Project Number:RS-2023-00238253).
文摘Analyzing the driving behavior of autonomous vehicles(AV)in mixed traffic conditions at urban intersections has become increasingly important for improving intersection design,providing infrastructure-based guidance information,and developing capability-enhanced AV perception systems.This study investigated the contributing factors affecting AV driving behavior using theWaymo Open Dataset.Binarized autonomous driving stability metrics,derived via a kernel density estimation,served as the target variables for a random forest classification model.The model’s input variables included 15 factors divided into four types:intersection-related,surrounding object-related,road infrastructure-related,and time-of-day-related types.The random forest classification model was employed to identify the key factors affecting autonomous driving behavior.In addition,the identified factors were further ranked based on feature importance.SHAP analysis was utilized to enhance model interpretability by quantifying the contribution of each factor and identifying their directional impacts.The type of intersection factor was found to have an importance of 0.243 and was the most influential factor on autonomous driving behavior.On average,intersection-related factors had an importance of 0.196,which is approximately a 31.1%margin over the average importance of surrounding object-related factors.Additionally,the surrounding object-related factors that were collected through sensors on the autonomous vehicle had a high degree of feature importance,especially with the number of pedestrians having the highest importance(0.107)of the types of objects.The correlation between these findings can contribute to the development of various treatments to improvemore harmonized AVs’maneuvering with other road users and facilities in urban mixed traffic environments.