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Main Authors: Seegert, Marvin, Oefinger, Christian, Moller, Korbinian, Bank, Christoph, Betz, Johannes
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.21926
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author Seegert, Marvin
Oefinger, Christian
Moller, Korbinian
Bank, Christoph
Betz, Johannes
author_facet Seegert, Marvin
Oefinger, Christian
Moller, Korbinian
Bank, Christoph
Betz, Johannes
contents Proprietary Autonomous Driving Systems are typically evaluated through disengagements, unplanned manual interventions to alter vehicle behavior, as annually reported by the California Department of Motor Vehicles. However, the real-world capabilities of prototypical open-source Level 4 vehicles over substantial distances remain largely unexplored. This study evaluates a research vehicle running an Autoware-based software stack across 236 km of mixed traffic. By classifying 30 disengagements across 26 rides with a novel five-level criticality framework, we observed a spatial disengagement rate of 0.127 1/km. Interventions predominantly occurred at lower speeds near static objects and traffic lights. Perception and Planning failures accounted for 40% and 26.7% of disengagements, respectively, largely due to object-tracking losses and operational deadlocks caused by parked vehicles. Frequent, unnecessary interventions highlighted a lack of trust on the part of the safety driver. These results show that while open-source software enables extensive operations, disengagement analysis is vital for uncovering robustness issues missed by standard metrics.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_21926
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Disengagement Analysis and Field Tests of a Prototypical Open-Source Level 4 Autonomous Driving System
Seegert, Marvin
Oefinger, Christian
Moller, Korbinian
Bank, Christoph
Betz, Johannes
Robotics
Proprietary Autonomous Driving Systems are typically evaluated through disengagements, unplanned manual interventions to alter vehicle behavior, as annually reported by the California Department of Motor Vehicles. However, the real-world capabilities of prototypical open-source Level 4 vehicles over substantial distances remain largely unexplored. This study evaluates a research vehicle running an Autoware-based software stack across 236 km of mixed traffic. By classifying 30 disengagements across 26 rides with a novel five-level criticality framework, we observed a spatial disengagement rate of 0.127 1/km. Interventions predominantly occurred at lower speeds near static objects and traffic lights. Perception and Planning failures accounted for 40% and 26.7% of disengagements, respectively, largely due to object-tracking losses and operational deadlocks caused by parked vehicles. Frequent, unnecessary interventions highlighted a lack of trust on the part of the safety driver. These results show that while open-source software enables extensive operations, disengagement analysis is vital for uncovering robustness issues missed by standard metrics.
title Disengagement Analysis and Field Tests of a Prototypical Open-Source Level 4 Autonomous Driving System
topic Robotics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.21926