Predicting Pedestrian Crossing Behavior in Germany and Japan: Insights into Model Transferability
Journal article, 2024

Predicting pedestrian crossing behavior is important for intelligent traffic systems to avoid pedestrian-vehicle collisions. Most existing pedestrian crossing behavior models are trained and evaluated on datasets collected from a single country, overlooking differences between countries. To address this gap, we compared pedestrian road-crossing behavior at unsignalized crossings in Germany and Japan. We presented four types of machine learning models to predict gap selection behavior, zebra crossing usage, and their trajectories using simulator data collected from both countries. When comparing the differences between countries, pedestrians from the study conducted in Japan are more cautious, selecting larger gaps compared to those in Germany. We evaluate and analyze model transferability. Our results show that neural networks outperform other machine learning models in predicting gap selection and zebra crossing usage, while random forest models perform best on trajectory prediction tasks, demonstrating strong performance and transferability. We develop a transferable model using an unsupervised clustering method, which improves prediction accuracy for gap selection and trajectory prediction. These findings provide a deeper understanding of pedestrian crossing behaviors in different countries and offer valuable insights into model transferability.

simulator study

model transferability

cross-country analysis

machine learning

Pedestrian crossing behavior

Author

Chi Zhang

Software Engineering 2

Janis Sprenger

DFKI

Zhongjun Ni

Linköping University

Christian Berger

Software Engineering 2

IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Vehicles

23798858 (eISSN)

Supporting the interaction of Humans and Automated vehicles: Preparing for the Environment of Tomorrow (Shape-IT)

European Commission (EC) (EC/H2020/860410), 2019-10-01 -- 2023-09-30.

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Transport

Infrastructure

ReVeRe (Research Vehicle Resource)

Subject Categories

Vehicle Engineering

Robotics

Computer Science

Computer Vision and Robotics (Autonomous Systems)

DOI

10.1109/TIV.2024.3506727

Related datasets

Cross-cultural behavior analysis of street-crossing pedestrians in japan and germany [dataset]

DOI: 10.1109/IV55152.2023.10186635

More information

Created

12/18/2024