ArXiv TLDR

Artificial Intelligence for Modeling and Simulation of Mixed Automated and Human Traffic

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2604.12857

Saeed Rahmani, Shiva Rasouli, Daphne Cornelisse, Eugene Vinitsky, Bart van Arem + 1 more

cs.AIcs.ROeess.SY

TLDR

This survey reviews AI methods for modeling and simulating mixed autonomous and human traffic, offering a new taxonomy and future directions.

Key contributions

  • Provides a comprehensive survey of AI methods for mixed autonomous and human traffic simulation.
  • Introduces a novel taxonomy categorizing AI methods into agent-level, environment-level, and cognitive/physics-informed.
  • Identifies shortcomings of current simulation platforms and proposes future research directions.
  • Reviews evaluation protocols, simulation tools, and datasets relevant to mixed traffic scenarios.

Why it matters

This paper fills a critical gap by providing a structured review of AI for mixed traffic simulation, essential for safe AV deployment. It bridges traffic engineering and computer science, guiding future research and development in this complex domain.

Original Abstract

Autonomous vehicles (AVs) are now operating on public roads, which makes their testing and validation more critical than ever. Simulation offers a safe and controlled environment for evaluating AV performance in varied conditions. However, existing simulation tools mainly focus on graphical realism and rely on simple rule-based models and therefore fail to accurately represent the complexity of driving behaviors and interactions. Artificial intelligence (AI) has shown strong potential to address these limitations; however, despite the rapid progress across AI methodologies, a comprehensive survey of their application to mixed autonomy traffic simulation remains lacking. Existing surveys either focus on simulation tools without examining the AI methods behind them, or cover ego-centric decision-making without addressing the broader challenge of modeling surrounding traffic. Moreover, they do not offer a unified taxonomy of AI methods covering individual behavior modeling to full scene simulation. To address these gaps, this survey provides a structured review and synthesis of AI methods for modeling AV and human driving behavior in mixed autonomy traffic simulation. We introduce a taxonomy that organizes methods into three families: agent-level behavior models, environment-level simulation methods, and cognitive and physics-informed methods. The survey analyzes how existing simulation platforms fall short of the needs of mixed autonomy research and outlines directions to narrow this gap. It also provides a chronological overview of AI methods and reviews evaluation protocols and metrics, simulation tools, and datasets. By covering both traffic engineering and computer science perspectives, we aim to bridge the gap between these two communities.

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