Abstract

Drowsiness detection is essential in some critical tasks such as vehicle driving, crane operating, mining blasting, and so on, which can help minimize the risks of inattentiveness. Electroencephalography (EEG) based drowsiness detection methods have been shown to be effective. However, due to the non-stationary nature of EEG signals, techniques such as signal transformation and sub-band extraction are increasingly being used to automatically classify awake and drowsy states. Most of these procedures require high computation time. In this paper, analytical and single-feature computation are used to propose a single-channel EEG-based drowsiness detection method to overcome this. Physionet sleep dataset and the simulated virtual driving dataset were used to test the proposed model. When compared to existing work, the proposed approach yields better results.

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