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Autores principales: Krügel, Sebastian, Uhl, Matthias
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.05391
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author Krügel, Sebastian
Uhl, Matthias
author_facet Krügel, Sebastian
Uhl, Matthias
contents Every maneuver of a vehicle redistributes risks between road users. While human drivers do this intuitively, autonomous vehicles allow and require deliberative algorithmic risk management. But how should traffic risks be distributed among road users? In a global experimental study in eight countries with different cultural backgrounds and almost 11,000 participants, we compared risk distribution preferences. It turns out that risk preferences in road traffic are strikingly similar between the cultural zones. The vast majority of participants in all countries deviates from a guiding principle of minimizing accident probabilities in favor of weighing up the probability and severity of accidents. At the national level, the consideration of accident probability and severity hardly differs between countries. The social dilemma of autonomous vehicles detected in deterministic crash scenarios disappears in risk assessments of everyday traffic situations in all countries. In no country do cyclists receive a risk bonus that goes beyond their higher vulnerability. In sum, our results suggest that a global consensus on the risk ethics of autonomous driving is easier to establish than on the ethics of crashing.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2501_05391
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The global consensus on the risk management of autonomous driving
Krügel, Sebastian
Uhl, Matthias
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Emerging Technologies
Every maneuver of a vehicle redistributes risks between road users. While human drivers do this intuitively, autonomous vehicles allow and require deliberative algorithmic risk management. But how should traffic risks be distributed among road users? In a global experimental study in eight countries with different cultural backgrounds and almost 11,000 participants, we compared risk distribution preferences. It turns out that risk preferences in road traffic are strikingly similar between the cultural zones. The vast majority of participants in all countries deviates from a guiding principle of minimizing accident probabilities in favor of weighing up the probability and severity of accidents. At the national level, the consideration of accident probability and severity hardly differs between countries. The social dilemma of autonomous vehicles detected in deterministic crash scenarios disappears in risk assessments of everyday traffic situations in all countries. In no country do cyclists receive a risk bonus that goes beyond their higher vulnerability. In sum, our results suggest that a global consensus on the risk ethics of autonomous driving is easier to establish than on the ethics of crashing.
title The global consensus on the risk management of autonomous driving
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
Emerging Technologies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.05391