• DocumentCode
    34887
  • Title

    Game-Theoretic Modeling of the Steering Interaction Between a Human Driver and a Vehicle Collision Avoidance Controller

  • Author

    Xiaoxiang Na ; Cole, David J.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Eng., Univ. of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
  • Volume
    45
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Feb. 2015
  • Firstpage
    25
  • Lastpage
    38
  • Abstract
    Development of vehicle active steering collision avoidance systems calls for mathematical models capable of predicting a human driver´s response so as to reduce the cost involved in field tests while accelerating product development. This paper provides a discussion on the paradigms that may be used for modeling a driver´s steering interaction with vehicle collision avoidance control in path-following scenarios. Four paradigms, namely decentralized, noncooperative Nash, noncooperative Stackelberg, and cooperative Pareto are established. The decentralized paradigm, which is developed on the basis of optimal control theory, represents a driver´s interaction with the collision avoidance controllers that disregard driver steering control. The noncooperative Nash and Stackelberg paradigms are used for predicting a driver´s steering behavior in response to the collision avoidance control that actively compensates for driver steering action. These two are devised based on the principles of equilibria in noncooperative game theory. The cooperative Pareto paradigm is derived from cooperative game theory to model a driver´s interaction with the collision avoidance systems that take into account the driver´s target path. The driver and the collision avoidance controllers´ optimization problems and their resulting steering strategies arise in each paradigm are delineated. Two mathematical approaches applicable to these optimization problems namely the distributed model predictive control and the linear quadratic dynamic optimization approaches are described in detail. A case study illustrating a conflict in steering control between driver and vehicle collision avoidance system is performed via simulation. It was found that the variation of driver path-error cost function weights results in a variety of steering behaviors, which are distinct between paradigms.
  • Keywords
    collision avoidance; game theory; road traffic control; cooperative Pareto paradigm; cooperative game theory; decentralized paradigm; driver path-error cost function; equilibrium principle; game theoretic modeling; human driver; human driver response; noncooperative Nash paradigm; noncooperative Stackelberg paradigm; optimal control theory; path following scenario; product development; steering behavior; steering interaction; vehicle active steering collision avoidance system; vehicle collision avoidance controller; Collision avoidance; Cost function; Games; Mathematical model; Vehicle dynamics; Vehicles; Active steering collision avoidance; driver; game theory; interaction; modeling; vehicle;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Human-Machine Systems, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    2168-2291
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/THMS.2014.2363124
  • Filename
    6951458