On Trustworthy Decision-Making Process of Human Drivers From the View of Perceptual Uncertainty Reduction

Humans are experts at making decisions for challenging driving tasks with uncertainties. Many efforts have been made to model the decision-making process of human drivers at the behavior level. However, limited studies explain how human drivers actively make trustworthy sequential decisions to complete interactive driving tasks in an uncertain environment. This paper argues that human drivers intently search for actions to reduce the uncertainty of their perception of the environment, i.e., perceptual uncertainty, to a low level that allows them to make a trustworthy decision easily. This paper provides a proof-of-concept framework to empirically reveal that human drivers’ perceptual uncertainty decreases when executing interactive tasks with uncertainties. The authors first introduce an explainable-artificial intelligence approach (i.e., SHapley Additive exPlanation, SHAP) to determine the salient features on which human drivers base decisions. Then, they use entropy-based measures to quantify the drivers’ perceptual changes in these ranked salient features across the decision-making process, reflecting the changes in uncertainties. The validation and verification of their proposed method are conducted in the highway on-ramp merging scenario with congested traffic using the INTERACTION dataset. Experimental results support that human drivers intentionally seek information to reduce their perceptual uncertainties in the number and rank of salient features of their perception of environments to make a trustworthy decision.

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  • English

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  • Accession Number: 01919817
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: May 28 2024 10:44AM