4.7 Article

Monitoring driver fatigue using a single-channel electroencephalographic device: A validation study by gaze-based, driving performance, and subjective data

Journal

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages 62-69

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aap.2017.09.025

Keywords

Brain activity; Driving simulation; Eye movements; Fatigue detector; Low-cost technology; Wearable technology

Funding

  1. Spanish Department of Transportation, Madrid, Spain [SPIP2014-1426]
  2. BBVA Foundation, Madrid, Spain [2015-2]
  3. Research Scholarship for Master Students (University of Granada Research Plan)
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [PSI2016-8055-R, PSI2014-53427-P]
  5. Andalusian Government Excellence Research grant [P11-TIC-7983]
  6. Fundacion Seneca [19267/PI/14]
  7. Ramon y Cajal fellowship program of the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness [RYC-2015-17483]

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Driver fatigue can impair performance as much as alcohol does. It is the most important road safety concern, causing thousands of accidents and fatalities every year. Thanks to technological developments, wearable, single-channel EEG devices are now getting considerable attention as fatigue monitors, as they could help drivers to assess their own levels of fatigue and, therefore, prevent the deterioration of performance. However, the few studies that have used single-channel EEG devices to investigate the physiological effects of driver fatigue have had inconsistent results, and the question of whether we can monitor driver fatigue reliably with these EEG devices remains open. Here, we assessed the validity of a single-channel EEG device (TGAM-based chip) to monitor changes in mental state (from alertness to fatigue). Fifteen drivers performed a 2-h simulated driving task while we recorded, simultaneously, their prefrontal brain activity and saccadic velocity. We used saccadic velocity as the reference index of fatigue. We also collected subjective ratings of alertness and fatigue, as well as driving performance. We found that the power spectra of the delta EEG band showed an inverted U-shaped quadratic trend (EEG power spectra increased. for the first hour and half, and decreased during the last thirty minutes), while the power spectra of the beta band linearly increased as the driving session progressed. Coherently, saccadic velocity linearly decreased and speeding time increased, suggesting a clear effect of fatigue. Subjective data corroborated these conclusions. Overall, our results suggest that the TGAM-based chip EEG device is able to detect changes in mental state while performing a complex and dynamic everyday task as driving.

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