Abstract

Increasing road crashes related to occupational drivers’ deteriorating health has become a social problem. To prevent road crashes, warnings and predictions of increased crash risk based on drivers’ conditions are important. However, in on-road driving, the relationship between drivers’ physiological condition and crash risk remains unclear due to difficulties in the simultaneous measurement of both. This study aimed to elucidate the relationship between drivers’ physiological condition assessed by autonomic nerve function (ANF) and an indicator of rear-end collision risk in on-road driving. Data from 20 male truck drivers (mean ± SD, 49.0±8.2 years; range, 35–63 years) were analyzed. Over a period of approximately three months, drivers’ working behavior data, such as automotive sensor data, and their ANF data were collected during their working shift. Using the gradient boosting decision tree method, a rear-end collision risk index was developed based on the working behavior data, which enabled continuous risk quantification. Using the developed risk index and drivers’ ANF data, effects of their physiological condition on risk were analyzed employing a logistic quantile regression method, which provides wider information on the effects of the explanatory variables, after hierarchical model selection. Our results revealed that in on-road driving, activation of sympathetic nerve activity and inhibition of parasympathetic nerve activity increased each quantile of the rear-end collision risk index. The findings suggest that acute stress-induced drivers’ fatigue increases rear-end collision risk. Hence, in on-road driving, drivers’ physiological condition monitoring and ANF-based stress warning and relief system can contribute to promoting the prevention of rear-end truck collisions.

Highlights

  • In recent years, traffic crashes due to drivers’ deteriorating health have become a problem worldwide [1]

  • As candidate variables to describe the state of the autonomic nervous system (ANS), in Step 2, we introduced the mainly-sympathetic nervous system (SNS)-reflecting variable (LFscore, LF/HF, and standard deviation of normal-to-normal R-R intervals (SDNN)) and the parasympathetic nervous system (PNS)-reflecting variable (HFscore, NN intervals greater than 50 ms (NN50), and root mean square successive difference (RMSSD)) [32]

  • Of the four driving scenes, we only evaluated the performance for high-speed and medium-speed scenes, excluding low-speed and extremely low-speed scenes due to lack of near-miss situations related to rear-end collision

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Summary

Objectives

This study aimed to elucidate the relationship between drivers’ physiological condition assessed by autonomic nerve function (ANF) and an indicator of rear-end collision risk in on-road driving. The aim of this study was to clarify the relationship between the risk of rear-end collision, which accounts for half of all truck crashes [23], and ANF, evaluated by physiological conditions such as fatigue, during actual vehicle operation [24]. This study aimed to clarify the relationship between drivers’ physiological condition in terms of ANF and an indicator of rear-end collision risk in on-road driving situations

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