Trajectory planning in dynamic multi-vehicle interaction environments faces three critical challenges, including the difficulty of quantifying spatial risk distributions, the complexity of characterizing behavioral uncertainty arising from the multimodal maneuvers of surrounding vehicles, and the challenge of simultaneously optimizing multiple competing objectives such as safety, efficiency, comfort, and energy consumption. To address these challenges, this paper proposes an Improved Driving Risk Field-based Multi-objective Trajectory Optimization (IDRF-MTO) method. First, a joint spatiotemporal social attention mechanism achieves unified modeling of spatial interactions, temporal dependencies, and spatiotemporal coupling, combined with a lateral–longitudinal intent strategy for multimodal trajectory prediction. Second, an improved dynamic risk field model is constructed comprising three components: a vehicle risk field that incorporates spatial orientation and motion direction factors for anisotropic risk representation, along with a collision tendency factor that converts objective risk into effective risk; a predicted trajectory risk field that achieves anticipatory quantification of future risk from surrounding vehicles through confidence-weighted fusion; and a driving environment risk field that encapsulates road geometry, static obstacles, and environmental conditions. Finally, a multi-objective cost function embedding risk field gradients is formulated, and multi-objective coordinated optimization is realized through a three-dimensional spatiotemporal situation graph with adaptive safety sampling. Simulation results demonstrate that the proposed method enhances safety while simultaneously improving comfort and efficiency and reducing energy consumption, exhibiting excellent planning performance in complex dynamic environments.
Gao et al. (Fri,) studied this question.