Q-SCM: A Quantum-Sequential Choice Model for Driver Mental State Evolution

📅 2026-07-13
📈 Citations: 0
Influential: 0
📄 PDF
🤖 AI Summary
This study addresses how drivers’ psychological states in interactive traffic are influenced by the history and sequence of perceived cues by proposing a Quantum Sequential Choice Model (Q-SCM). The model represents the driver’s latent state as a two-level quantum system—neutral versus defensive—on the Bloch sphere, with unitary evolution governed by Pauli matrices to process sequential cues. A quantum cognitive mechanism is introduced atop a classical random utility action selection layer to characterize category membership, embedding quantum structure exclusively at the membership level. Novel mechanisms—including monotonicity constraints, geodesic preservation, and relaxation recovery—are designed to effectively capture memory effects, phase influences, and order dependence. Validation on naturalistic driving data from 9,610 drivers comprising 85,754 trajectories demonstrates that the defensive state significantly depends on both the cumulative history and processing order of perceptual cues.
📝 Abstract
We propose a Quantum-Sequential Choice Model (Q-SCM) for modelling driver mental state evolution in interactive traffic environments. The proposed framework retains the classical latent class choice structure, but replaces the conventional class membership formulation with a quantum cognitive state model. A unique feature of this model is that the quantum component is confined to the class membership layer, while the action choice layer remains a classical RUM. The driver's latent state is represented as a two-state quantum system on the Bloch sphere including neutral and defensive states. Perceptual cues, including separation distance, closing time-to-collision (CTTC), and lane deviation induce sequential unitary rotations governed by Pauli matrices. This formulation allows the model to capture memory, phase effects, cue order dependence, and transitions between behavioural regimes that depend on prior cue history. To ensure well-behaved state evolution, we introduce three control mechanisms: a monotonicity constraint that prevents pendulum-like overshoot, a geodesic safeguard mechanism that ensures convergence toward the defensive state under sustained threat exposure, and a relaxation step that allows recovery toward the neutral baseline when the threat weakens. The model is estimated using 85,754 observations from 9,610 drivers extracted from naturalistic trajectories. The empirical results show that defensive state formation is not governed only by the instantaneous values of traffic cues, but also by the accumulated cue history and the order in which cues are processed.
Problem

Research questions and friction points this paper is trying to address.

driver mental state evolution
sequential choice
quantum cognition
behavioral regime transition
cue order dependence
Innovation

Methods, ideas, or system contributions that make the work stand out.

Quantum cognition
Sequential choice model
Driver mental state
Bloch sphere representation
Unitary evolution
🔎 Similar Papers
No similar papers found.