A Formal Characterization of Black-Box System Safety Performance with Scenario Sampling.

2021 
A typical scenario-based evaluation framework seeks to characterize a black-box system's safety performance (e.g., failure rate) through repeatedly sampling initialization configurations (scenario sampling) and executing a certain test policy for scenario propagation (scenario testing) with the black-box system involved as the test subject. In this letter, we first present a novel safety evaluation criterion that seeks to characterize the actual operational domain within which the test subject would remain safe indefinitely with high probability. By formulating the black-box testing scenario as a dynamic system, we show that the presented problem is equivalent to finding a certain "almost" robustly forward invariant set for the given system. Second, for an arbitrary scenario testing strategy, we propose a scenario sampling algorithm that is provably asymptotically optimal in obtaining the safe invariant set with arbitrarily high accuracy. Moreover, as one considers different testing strategies (e.g., biased sampling of safety-critical cases), we show that the proposed algorithm still converges to the unbiased approximation of the safety characterization outcome if the scenario testing satisfies a certain condition. Finally, the effectiveness of the presented scenario sampling algorithms and various theoretical properties are demonstrated in a case study of the safety evaluation of a control barrier function-based mobile robot collision avoidance system.
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