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Autores principales: Wang, Boxuan, Duan, Haonan, Feng, Yanhao, Chen, Xu, Fu, Yongjie, Mo, Zhaobin, Di, Xuan
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.12680
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author Wang, Boxuan
Duan, Haonan
Feng, Yanhao
Chen, Xu
Fu, Yongjie
Mo, Zhaobin
Di, Xuan
author_facet Wang, Boxuan
Duan, Haonan
Feng, Yanhao
Chen, Xu
Fu, Yongjie
Mo, Zhaobin
Di, Xuan
contents Social norm is defined as a shared standard of acceptable behavior in a society. The emergence of social norms fosters coordination among agents without any hard-coded rules, which is crucial for the large-scale deployment of AVs in an intelligent transportation system. This paper explores the application of LLMs in understanding and modeling social norms in autonomous driving games. We introduce LLMs into autonomous driving games as intelligent agents who make decisions according to text prompts. These agents are referred to as LLM-based agents. Our framework involves LLM-based agents playing Markov games in a multi-agent system (MAS), allowing us to investigate the emergence of social norms among individual agents. We aim to identify social norms by designing prompts and utilizing LLMs on textual information related to the environment setup and the observations of LLM-based agents. Using the OpenAI Chat API powered by GPT-4.0, we conduct experiments to simulate interactions and evaluate the performance of LLM-based agents in two driving scenarios: unsignalized intersection and highway platoon. The results show that LLM-based agents can handle dynamically changing environments in Markov games, and social norms evolve among LLM-based agents in both scenarios. In the intersection game, LLM-based agents tend to adopt a conservative driving policy when facing a potential car crash. The advantage of LLM-based agents in games lies in their strong operability and analyzability, which facilitate experimental design.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2408_12680
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Can LLMs Understand Social Norms in Autonomous Driving Games?
Wang, Boxuan
Duan, Haonan
Feng, Yanhao
Chen, Xu
Fu, Yongjie
Mo, Zhaobin
Di, Xuan
Artificial Intelligence
Social norm is defined as a shared standard of acceptable behavior in a society. The emergence of social norms fosters coordination among agents without any hard-coded rules, which is crucial for the large-scale deployment of AVs in an intelligent transportation system. This paper explores the application of LLMs in understanding and modeling social norms in autonomous driving games. We introduce LLMs into autonomous driving games as intelligent agents who make decisions according to text prompts. These agents are referred to as LLM-based agents. Our framework involves LLM-based agents playing Markov games in a multi-agent system (MAS), allowing us to investigate the emergence of social norms among individual agents. We aim to identify social norms by designing prompts and utilizing LLMs on textual information related to the environment setup and the observations of LLM-based agents. Using the OpenAI Chat API powered by GPT-4.0, we conduct experiments to simulate interactions and evaluate the performance of LLM-based agents in two driving scenarios: unsignalized intersection and highway platoon. The results show that LLM-based agents can handle dynamically changing environments in Markov games, and social norms evolve among LLM-based agents in both scenarios. In the intersection game, LLM-based agents tend to adopt a conservative driving policy when facing a potential car crash. The advantage of LLM-based agents in games lies in their strong operability and analyzability, which facilitate experimental design.
title Can LLMs Understand Social Norms in Autonomous Driving Games?
topic Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2408.12680