Driving Style Recognition Based on Electroencephalography Data From a Simulated Driving Experiment.

Front Psychol

Hubei Key Laboratory of Advanced Technology for Automotive Components, School of Automotive Engineering, Wuhan University of Technology, Wuhan, China.

Published: May 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • Driving style is a key factor in assessing a driver's safety and performance, with dangerous driving behaviors linked to poor driving styles.
  • Recognizing driving styles through advanced methods could help improve driver safety by allowing systems like ADAS to warn drivers or adjust vehicle controls in real-time.
  • This study introduces a method using both objective driving data and EEG signals to classify driving styles, achieving an 80% accuracy rate, with distinct EEG patterns identified for conservative versus aggressive drivers.

Article Abstract

Driving style is a very important indicator and a crucial measurement of a driver's performance and ability to drive in a safe and protective manner. A dangerous driving style would possibly result in dangerous behaviors. If the driving styles can be recognized by some appropriate classification methods, much attention could be paid to the drivers with dangerous driving styles. The driving style recognition module can be integrated into the advanced driving assistance system (ADAS), which integrates different modules to improve driving automation, safety and comfort, and then the driving safety could be enhanced by pre-warning the drivers or adjusting the vehicle's controlling parameters when the dangerous driving style is detected. In most previous studies, driver's questionnaire data and vehicle's objective driving data were utilized to recognize driving styles. And promising results were obtained. However, these methods were indirect or subjective in driving style evaluation. In this paper a method based on objective driving data and electroencephalography (EEG) data was presented to classify driving styles. A simulated driving system was constructed and the EEG data and the objective driving data were collected synchronously during the simulated driving. The driving style of each participant was classified by clustering the driving data via K-means. Then the EEG data was denoised and the amplitude and the Power Spectral Density (PSD) of four frequency bands were extracted as the EEG features by Fast Fourier transform and Welch. Finally, the EEG features, combined with the classification results of the driving data were used to train a Support Vector Machine (SVM) model and a leave-one-subject-out cross validation was utilized to evaluate the performance. The SVM classification accuracy was about 80.0%. Conservative drivers showed higher PSDs in the parietal and occipital areas in the alpha and beta bands, aggressive drivers showed higher PSD in the temporal area in the delta and theta bands. These results imply that different driving styles were related with different driving strategies and mental states and suggest the feasibility of driving style recognition from EEG patterns.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6549479PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2019.01254DOI Listing

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