Principles and Reasons Behind Automated Vehicle Decisions in Ethically Ambiguous Everyday Scenarios
Lucas Elbert Suryana, Simeon Calvert, Arkady Zgonnikov, Bart van Arem

TL;DR
This paper develops a framework for automated vehicle decision-making in everyday ethically ambiguous situations, emphasizing human-aligned values, safety, and contextual flexibility based on expert insights.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, empirically grounded framework for AV decisions that incorporates human reasons and contextual trade-offs in routine scenarios.
Findings
Thirteen categories of reasons for AV decisions identified
Safety prioritized over strict legal compliance in context
Framework enables flexible, justified deviations from rules
Abstract
Automated vehicles (AVs) increasingly encounter ethically ambiguous situations in everyday driving--scenarios involving conflicting human interests and lacking clearly optimal courses of action. While existing ethical models often focus on rare, high-stakes dilemmas (e.g., crash avoidance or trolley problems), routine decisions such as overtaking cyclists or navigating social interactions remain underexplored. This study addresses that gap by applying the tracking condition of Meaningful Human Control (MHC), which holds that AV behaviour should align with human reasons--defined as the values, intentions, and expectations that justify actions. We conducted qualitative interviews with 18 AV experts to identify the types of reasons that should inform AV manoeuvre planning. Thirteen categories of reasons emerged, organised across normative, strategic, tactical, and operational levels, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHuman-Automation Interaction and Safety · Autonomous Vehicle Technology and Safety · Ethics and Social Impacts of AI
