Towards Human-Centric Evaluation of Interaction-Aware Automated Vehicle Controllers: A Framework and Case Study
Federico Scar\`i, Olger Siebinga, and Arkady Zgonnikov

TL;DR
This paper introduces a comprehensive evaluation framework for interaction-aware automated vehicle controllers that considers human-centered metrics, demonstrated through a case study in a merging scenario to improve understanding of human-AV interactions.
Contribution
It proposes a structured, multi-domain evaluation framework incorporating human-centric metrics for AV controllers, filling a gap in current performance assessment methods.
Findings
Inclusion of all four domains reveals differences in driver experience.
Metrics like perceived safety and driver workload provide insights beyond technical performance.
The framework enhances understanding of human-AV interaction quality.
Abstract
As automated vehicles (AVs) increasingly integrate into mixed-traffic environments, evaluating their interaction with human-driven vehicles (HDVs) becomes critical. In most research focused on developing new AV control algorithms (controllers), the performance of these algorithms is assessed solely based on performance metrics such as collision avoidance or lane-keeping efficiency, while largely overlooking the human-centred dimensions of interaction with HDVs. This paper proposes a structured evaluation framework that addresses this gap by incorporating metrics grounded in the human-robot interaction literature. The framework spans four key domains: a) interaction effect, b) interaction perception, c) interaction effort, and d) interaction ability. These domains capture both the performance of the AV and its impact on human drivers around it. To demonstrate the utility of the…
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