Language of Driving Concepts

The Language of Driving (LoD) describes the implicit and explicit signals that allow autonomous vehicles and humans to understand each other in mixed traffic [1–3].

Semantics and Pragmatics of Driving

Driving behavior can be analyzed as a layered communication system:

  • Phonetics: visible cues such as lights or motion rhythm.
  • Semantics: the meaning of those cues (e.g., yield, proceed).
  • Pragmatics: how meaning changes with context and environment.

An autonomous vehicle must infer human intent and simultaneously display legible intent of its own [2].

Cultural Adaptation and Universality

Driving “languages” vary globally; hence interfaces must maintain universal meaning while allowing local adaptation [1]. Behavior should be recognizable but not anthropomorphic, preserving clarity across cultures [3].

LoD Implementation Examples

Field experiments using light-based cues have shown that simple color and motion patterns effectively communicate awareness and yielding. Participants reported improved understanding when signals were consistent and redundant across modalities [2].

 Typical pedestrian crossing scenario using visual LoD cues.

Future Development

Formalizing LoD as a measurable framework is essential for verification, standardization, and interoperability of automated behavior [3].


References: [1] Razdan, R. et al. (2020). *Unsettled Topics Concerning Human and Autonomous Vehicle Interaction.* SAE EDGE Research Report EPR2020025. [2] Kalda, K., Sell, R., Soe, R.-M. (2021). *Use Case of Autonomous Vehicle Shuttle and Passenger Acceptance.* Proc. Estonian Academy of Sciences, 70 (4). [3] Kalda, K., Pizzagalli, S.-L., Soe, R.-M., Sell, R., Bellone, M. (2022). *Language of Driving for Autonomous Vehicles.* *Applied Sciences*, 12 (11).

en/safeav/hmc/lang.txt · Last modified: 2025/10/20 19:25 by raivo.sell
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