Utilising raw psycho-physiological data and functional data analysis for estimating mental workload in human drivers.

IF 2.4 3区 工程技术 Q3 ENGINEERING, INDUSTRIAL Ergonomics Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-22 DOI:10.1080/00140139.2024.2379949
David Eniyandunmo, MinJu Shin, Chaeyoung Lee, Alvee Anwar, Eunsik Kim, Kyongwon Kim, Yong Hoon Kim, Chris Lee
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Abstract

Recent studies have focused on accurately estimating mental workload using machine learning algorithms and extracting features from physiological measures. However, feature extraction leads to the loss of valuable information and often results in binary classifications that lack specificity in the identification of optimum mental workload. This study investigates the feasibility of using raw physiological data (EEG, facial EMG, ECG, EDA, pupillometry) combined with Functional Data Analysis (FDA) to estimate the mental workload of human drivers. A driving scenario with five tasks was employed, and subjective ratings were collected. Results demonstrate that the FDA applied nine different combinations of raw physiological signals achieving a maximum 90% accuracy, outperforming extracted features by 73%. This study shows that the mental workload of human drivers can be accurately estimated without utilising burdensome feature extraction. The approach proposed in this study offers promise for mental workload assessment in real-world applications.

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利用原始心理生理数据和功能数据分析估算人类驾驶员的脑力劳动负荷。
最近的研究侧重于利用机器学习算法和从生理测量中提取特征来准确估计脑力劳动负荷。然而,特征提取会导致有价值信息的丢失,并经常导致二元分类,在识别最佳脑力劳动负荷方面缺乏特异性。本研究探讨了使用原始生理数据(脑电图、面部肌电图、心电图、电子脑电图、瞳孔测量)结合功能数据分析(FDA)来估算人类驾驶员心理工作量的可行性。采用了包含五项任务的驾驶场景,并收集了主观评分。结果表明,FDA 应用了九种不同的原始生理信号组合,达到了最高 90% 的准确率,比提取的特征高出 73%。这项研究表明,无需使用繁琐的特征提取,就能准确估计人类驾驶员的心理工作量。本研究提出的方法为实际应用中的心理工作量评估带来了希望。
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来源期刊
Ergonomics
Ergonomics 工程技术-工程:工业
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
12.50%
发文量
147
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Ergonomics, also known as human factors, is the scientific discipline that seeks to understand and improve human interactions with products, equipment, environments and systems. Drawing upon human biology, psychology, engineering and design, Ergonomics aims to develop and apply knowledge and techniques to optimise system performance, whilst protecting the health, safety and well-being of individuals involved. The attention of ergonomics extends across work, leisure and other aspects of our daily lives. The journal Ergonomics is an international refereed publication, with a 60 year tradition of disseminating high quality research. Original submissions, both theoretical and applied, are invited from across the subject, including physical, cognitive, organisational and environmental ergonomics. Papers reporting the findings of research from cognate disciplines are also welcome, where these contribute to understanding equipment, tasks, jobs, systems and environments and the corresponding needs, abilities and limitations of people. All published research articles in this journal have undergone rigorous peer review, based on initial editor screening and anonymous refereeing by independent expert referees.
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