An eHMI Presenting Request-to-Intervene and Takeover Status of Level 3 Automated Vehicles to Support Surrounding Traffic Safety
Hailong Liu, Masaki Kuge, Toshihiro Hiraoka, Takahiro Wada
TLDR
An eHMI using cyan/orange light bars externalizes Level 3 AV takeover status, significantly improving surrounding drivers' understanding and safety.
Key contributions
- Proposes eHMI C+O (cyan/orange light bars) to show Level 3 AV's Request-to-Intervene (RtI) status.
- eHMI C+O improved surrounding drivers' understanding of AV intent and behavior prediction.
- Reduced driver hesitation, increased confidence, and promoted earlier, larger time headway.
- Significantly reduced accident odds for following MVs by 76.8% in AV accident scenarios.
Why it matters
Level 3 AV takeover transitions are safety-critical but invisible to surrounding drivers. This eHMI addresses a key safety gap by making AV intentions clear, significantly reducing accident odds and improving road safety.
Original Abstract
Level 3 automated vehicles (AVs) issue a request to intervene (RtI) when the automated driving system approaches its system limitations. Although this takeover transition is safety-critical, it is usually invisible to surrounding manually driven vehicle (MV) drivers. This study proposes an external human-machine interface (eHMI) called eHMI C+O that externalizes the RtI-related takeover status of a Level~3 AV using cyan and orange light bars. A driving-simulator experiment with 40 participants examined whether the proposed eHMI supports surrounding MV drivers during AV takeover scenarios. The results showed that, compared with the ADS-status-only eHMI condition, which is similar to ``Automated Driving Marker Lights,'' and the no-eHMI condition, the proposed eHMI C+O significantly improved participants' understanding of the AV's driving intention, their prediction of its behavior, and their perceived sufficiency of the information presented by the AV. It also reduced hesitation, increased confidence, and promoted earlier and larger increases in time headway after the RtI was issued. In the AV accident scenario, eHMI C+O significantly reduced the odds of accident involvement for the following MV compared with the no-eHMI condition, corresponding to a 76.8% reduction in accident odds. Exploratory path analysis suggested that the safety benefit of the proposed eHMI C+O may be associated with improved situation awareness and earlier defensive driving responses. These findings indicate that externalizing RtI-related takeover status can help surrounding drivers better understand Level 3 AVs and respond more safely during safety-critical takeover transitions.
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