âEmergent Road Rules In Multi-Agent Driving Environmentsâ, 2020-11-21 (; similar)â :
For autonomous vehicles to safely share the road with human drivers, autonomous vehicles must abide by specific âroad rulesâ that human drivers have agreed to follow. âRoad rulesâ include rules that drivers are required to follow by lawâsuch as the requirement that vehicles stop at red lightsâas well as more subtle social rulesâsuch as the implicit designation of fast lanes on the highway. In this paper, we provide empirical evidence that suggests thatâinstead of hard-coding road rules into self-driving algorithmsâa scalable alternative may be to design multi-agent environments in which road rules emerge as optimal solutions to the problem of maximizing traffic flow.
We analyze what ingredients in driving environments cause the emergence of these road rules and find that two crucial factors are noisy perception and agentsâ spatial density.
We provide qualitative and quantitative evidence of the emergence of 7 social driving behaviors, ranging from obeying traffic signals to following lanes, all of which emerge from training agents to drive quickly to destinations without colliding.
Our results add empirical support for the social road rules that countries worldwide have agreed on for safe, efficient driving.
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