Validation of human benchmark models for automated driving system approval: How competent and careful are they really?
Journal article, 2025

Over the last few decades, new technological solutions have enabled the fast development of Advanced Driver Assistance Systems (ADAS) and Automated Driving Systems (ADS). These systems are expected to improve comfort, productivity and, most importantly, safety for all road users. To ensure that the systems are safe, rules and regulations describing the systems’ approval and validation procedures are in effect in Europe. The UNECE Regulation 157 (R157) is one of those. Annex 3 of R157 describes two driver models, representing the performance of a “competent and careful” driver, which can be used as benchmarks to determine whether, in certain situations, a crash would be preventable by a human driver. However, these models have not been validated against human behavior in real safety–critical events. Therefore, this study uses counterfactual simulation to assess the performance of the two models when applied to 38 safety–critical cut-in near-crashes from the SHRP2 naturalistic driving study. The results show that the two computational models performed rather differently from the human drivers: one model showed a generally delayed braking reaction compared to the human drivers, causing crashes in three of the original near-crashes. The other model demonstrated, in general, brake onsets substantially earlier than the human drivers, possibly being overly sensitive to lateral perturbations. That is, the first model does not seem to behave as the competent and careful driver it is supposed to represent, while the second seems to be overly careful. Overall, our results show that, if models are to be included in regulations, they need to be substantially improved. We argue that achieving this will require better validation across the scenario types that the models are intended to cover (e.g., cut-in conflicts), a process which should include applying the models counterfactually to near-crashes and validating them against several different safety related metrics. Possible improvements to the models include adding components that better reflect the level of urgency of the traffic situation, something which is lacking in the current models.

European regulation

Human benchmark

Automated Driving Systems

Driver model

UNECE

Author

Pierluigi Olleja

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Gustav M Markkula

University of Leeds

Jonas Bärgman

Chalmers, Mechanics and Maritime Sciences (M2), Vehicle Safety

Accident Analysis and Prevention

0001-4575 (ISSN)

Vol. 213 107922

Improved quantitative driver behavior models and safety assessment methods for ADAS and AD (QUADRIS)

VINNOVA (2020-05156), 2021-04-01 -- 2024-03-31.

Areas of Advance

Transport

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Vehicle Engineering

DOI

10.1016/j.aap.2025.107922

More information

Latest update

2/12/2025