Fire Technology | 2019

Human-Like Sequential Learning of Escape Routes for Virtual Reality Agents

 
 
 
 

Abstract


AbstractThe Piper Alpha disaster (1988) witnessed 167 casualties. The offshore safety guidelines developed afterward highlighted the need for effective and regular training to overcome the problems in evacuation procedures. Today, virtual environments are effective training platforms due to high-end audio/visual and interactive capabilities. These virtual environments exploit agents with human-like steering capabilities, but with limited or no capacity to learn routes. This work proposes a sequential route learning methodology for agents that resembles the way people learn routes. The methodology developed here exploits a generalized stochastic Petri-net based route learning model iteratively. The simulated results are compared with the route learning strategies of human participants. The data on human participants were collected by the authors from an earlier study in a virtual environment. The main contribution lies in modeling people’s route learning behavior over the course of successive exposures. It is found that the proposed methodology models human-like sequential route learning if there are no easy detours from the original escape route. Although the model does not accurately capture individual learning strategies for all decision nodes, it can be used as a model of compliant, rule-following training guides for a virtual environment.\n

Volume 55
Pages 1057-1083
DOI 10.1007/S10694-019-00819-7
Language English
Journal Fire Technology

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