Abstract

This study aims to build a system for detecting a driver’s internal state using body-worn sensors. Our system is intended to detect inattentive driving that occurs during long-term driving on a monotonous road, such as a high-way road. The inattentive state of a driver in this study is an absent-minded state caused by a decrease in driver vigilance levels due to fatigue or drowsiness. However, it is difficult to clearly define these inattentive states because it is difficult for the driver to recognize when they fall into an absent-minded state. To address this problem and achieve our goal, we have proposed a detection algorithm for inattentive driving that not only uses a heart rate sensor, but also uses body-worn inertial sensors, which have the potential to detect driver behavior more accurately and at a much lower cost. The proposed method combines three detection models: body movement, drowsiness, and inattention detection, based on an anomaly detection algorithm. Furthermore, we have verified the accuracy of the algorithm with the experimental data for five participants that were measured in long-term and monotonous driving scenarios by using a driving simulator. The results indicate that our approach can detect both the inattentive and drowsiness states of drivers using signals from both the heart rate sensor and accelerometers placed on wrists.

Highlights

  • Inattentive driving is one of the leading causes of traffic accidents, accounting for approximately 20% of fatal accidents in Japan [1]

  • The results suggested that the variance of the acceleration data on the wrists may be reflecting a change in a driver’s internal state; drowsiness and the inattentive state of a driver may be detected by analyzing both physiological and behavioral signals, which can be measured by devices, such as a heart rate monitor or an accelerometer built in a smartwatch

  • We proposed an algorithm for detecting inattentive states and drowsiness, which occurs in long, monotonous driving scenarios, such as highways, using bodyworn accelerometers and a heart rate sensor

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Summary

Introduction

Inattentive driving is one of the leading causes of traffic accidents, accounting for approximately 20% of fatal accidents in Japan [1]. The inattentive state of a driver in this study is an absent-minded state caused by a decrease in driver vigilance levels due to fatigue or drowsiness. A driver assistance system for monitoring these drivers’ internal states, such as the driver’s vigilance or drowsiness, is important to prevent such accidents. Inattention detection systems can be classified into two categories according to the types of their input signals. Kume et al [3] reported that the sensitivity of detecting an inattentive state using in-vehicle sensors was 53% with a fixed threshold, and 82% with a manually set threshold. It is difficult to detect weak drowsiness that the driver is unaware of from vehicle signals [8]

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