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The prevalence of automated vehicles (with eHMIs) may influence pedestrian-vehicle interactions

A screenshot from the experiment

Daniel Eisele, Carla B. Bubeck, Matthias Rudolf & Tibor Petzoldt



Abstract #

The proportion of highly automated vehicles in traffic (i.e., the prevalence of AVs) is likely to increase over time. The aim of this study was to investigate whether the prevalence of AVs may influence how pedestrians interact with AVs and with conventional, human-driven vehicles (CVs). A video-based laboratory study was conducted using a two-group mixed design. Participants took the perspective of pedestrians about to cross the road in a situation where AVs (with eHMIs) and CVs were approaching their position. The prevalence of AVs was manipulated between groups (low/high). The participants indicated the moment they decided to cross in front of the vehicles. Our results show that AV prevalence did indeed significantly influence when participants decided to cross. Overall, participants decided to cross earlier in front of the more prevalent vehicle type. Therefore, taking into account the given prevalence of AVs could significantly benefit AVs in predicting pedestrian behavior.


Recommended Citation:

Eisele, D., Bubeck, C. B., Rudolf, M., & Petzoldt, T. (2024). The Prevalence of Automated Vehicles (with eHMIs) May Influence Pedestrian-Vehicle Interactions. 16th International Conference on Automotive User Interfaces and Interactive Vehicular Applications, 329–337. https://doi.org/10.1145/3640792.3675723