Abstract

Alcohol is the root cause of numerous traffic accidents due to its pharmacological action on the human central nervous system. This study conducted a detection process to distinguish drunk driving from normal driving under simulated driving conditions. The classification was performed by a support vector machine (SVM) classifier trained to distinguish between these two classes by integrating both driving performance and physiological measurements. In addition, principal component analysis was conducted to rank the weights of the features. The standard deviation of R–R intervals (SDNN), the root mean square value of the difference of the adjacent R–R interval series (RMSSD), low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), the ratio of the low and high frequencies (LF/HF), and average blink duration were the highest weighted features in the study. The results show that SVM classification can successfully distinguish drunk driving from normal driving with an accuracy of 70%. The driving performance data and the physiological measurements reported by this paper combined with air-alcohol concentration could be integrated using the support vector regression classification method to establish a better early warning model, thereby improving vehicle safety.

Highlights

  • As is well known, driving under the influence of alcohol is life-threatening

  • The results showed that support vector machine (SVM) were better than negative binomial models and back-propagation neural networks for crash prediction

  • The driving performance data were collected from the driving simulator, and the physiological behaviour data were collected from the wireless sensors

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Summary

Introduction

As is well known, driving under the influence of alcohol is life-threatening. Data from both developed and developing countries show that the risks are similar. In Australia, a blood alcohol concentration (BAC) of 0.05% has been found in approximately 30% of all drivers fatally injured in crashes [1,2]. In Canada, 38.3% of the fatal driver injuries in 2003 were alcohol-related [2]. Drinking and driving is thought to be responsible for approximately 20% of all road fatalities in Europe every year [2,3]. In the U.S, alcohol-impaired driving was the cause of nearly 11,000 deaths—approximately one–third of all U.S traffic-related fatalities in 2009 [4,5].

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