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Total results: 696

Dynamic driving risk in highway tunnel groups based on pupillary oscillations

Year: 2024

Authors: H Zheng, Z Du,S Wang

This study aims to understand the dynamic changes in driving risks in highway tunnel groups. Real-world driving experiments were conducted, collecting pupil area data to measure pupil size oscillations using the Percentage of Pupil Area Variable (PPAV) metric. The analysis focused on investigating relative pupil size fluctuations to explore trends in driving risk fluctuations within tunnel groups. The objective was to identify accident-prone areas and key factors influencing driving risks, providing insights for safety improvements. The findings revealed an overall “whipping effect” phenomenon in driving risk changes within tunnel groups. Differences were observed between interior tunnel areas and open sections, including adjacent, approach, and departure zones. Higher driving risks were associated with locations closer to the tail end of the tunnel group and shorter exit departure sections. Targeted safety improvement designs should consider fluctuation patterns in different directions, with attention to tunnels at the tail end. In open sections, increased travel distance and lengths of upstream and downstream tunnels raised driving risks, while longer open zones improved driving risks. Driving direction and sequence had minimal impact on risks. By integrating driver vision, tunnel characteristics, and the environment, this study identified high-risk areas and critical factors, providing guidance for monitoring and improving driving risks in tunnel groups. The findings have practical implications for the operation and safety management of tunnel groups.

6 versions available

Evaluation of driver’s situation awareness in freeway exit using backpropagation neural network

Year: 2024

Authors: Y Yang, Y Chen, SM Easa, J Lin, M Chen

Based on combining the relevant studies on situation awareness (SA), this paper integrated multiple indicators, including eye movement, electroencephalogram (EEG), and driving behavior, to evaluate SA. SA is typically divided into three stages: perception, understanding, and prediction. This paper used eye movement indicators to represent perception, EEG indicators to represent understanding, and driving behavior indicators to represent prediction. After identifying indicators for evaluating SA, a driving simulation experiment was designed to collect data on the indicators. 41 subjects were recruited to participate in the investigation, and the experimenter collected data from each subject in a total of 9 groups. After removing 4 groups of invalid data, 365 groups of valid data were finally obtained. The grey correlation analysis was used to optimize the SA indicators, and 10 SA evaluation indicators were finally determined. There were the average fixation duration, the nearest neighbor index, pupil area, the percentage power spectral density values of the 3 rhythmic waves (θ, α, β), rhythmic wave energy combination parameters (α/θ), mean speed, SD of speed and acceleration. Taking the optimized 10 indicators as input and the SA scores as output, a backpropagation neural network model with a topological structure of 10-8-1 was constructed. 75% of the data were randomly selected for model training, and the final network training’s mean square error was 0.0025. Using the remaining 25% of data for verification, the average absolute error and average relative error of the predicted results are 0.248 and 0.046, respectively. This showed that the model was effective, and it was feasible to evaluate the SA by using the data of eye movement, EEG and driving behavior parameters.

5 versions available

Exploring the occupational fatigue risk of short-haul truck drivers: effects of sleep pattern, driving task, and time-on-task on driving behavior and eye-motion metrics

Year: 2024

Authors: C Zhang,Y Ma, S Chen, J Zhang, G Xing

Driver fatigue is the leading cause of truck-related accidents. The most significant occupational fatigue factors among short-haul truck drivers are sleep patterns, the round-trip driving task, and the time-on-task. However, the underlying mechanisms of these influential factors remain unclear. This study aims to explore the interactive effects of sleep patterns, driving task, and time-on-task on driving behavior and eye-motion metrics among short-haul truck drivers. We obtained test data from eleven professional short-haul truck drivers, with each driver participating in a three-day test under the conditions of two driving tasks and three different sleep patterns. We applied three-way repeated-measure ANOVA and non-parametric tests to analyze the data. The results reveal that: (1) violation of sleep-related legal requirements, insufficient sleep, and unreasonable time-on-task can have negative effects on short-haul truck drivers' vigilance and driving performance; (2) both driving task and sleep pattern contribute to driver fatigue, and the interaction of time-on-task and sleep pattern exacerbates driver fatigue more than the effects of any single factor alone; and (3) short-haul truck drivers who are sleep deprived exhibit short periods of controlled compensatory behavior during the outbound task, and sleepiness is more prevalent during the inbound task compared to the outbound task due to the monotony and low workload of the driving process. These findings provide theoretical and practical guidance for transportation industry managers to strengthen company-wide fatigue-related regulations, ensure adequate sleep for drivers via regulations, and optimize work schedules to improve safety outcomes of short-haul truck drivers.

5 versions available

Gaze alternation predicts inclusive next-speaker selection: evidence from eyetracking

Year: 2024

Authors: C Rühlemann

Next-speaker selection refers to the practices conversationalists rely on to designate who should speak next. Speakers have various methods available to them to select a next speaker. Certain actions, however, systematically co-select more than one particular participant to respond. These actions include asking “open-floor” questions, which are addressed to more than one recipient and that more than one recipient are eligible to answer. Here, next-speaker selection is inclusive. How are these questions multimodally designed? How does their multimodal design differ from the design of “closed-floor” questions, in which just one participant is selected as next speaker and where next-speaker selection is exclusive? Based on eyetracking data collected in naturalistic conversation, this study demonstrates that unlike closed-floor questions, open-floor questions can be predicted based on the speaker’s gaze alternation during the question. The discussion highlights cases of gaze alternation in open-floor questions and exhaustively explores deviant cases in closed-floor questions. It also addresses the functional relation of gaze alternation and gaze selection, arguing that the two selection techniques may collide, creating disorderly turntaking due to a fundamental change in participation framework from focally dyadic to inclusive. Data are in British and American English.

1 version available:

GazeAway: Designing for Gaze Aversion Experiences

Year: 2024

Authors: N Overdevest,R Patibanda,A Saini

Gaze aversion is embedded in our behaviour: we look at a blank area to support remembering and creative thinking, and as a social cue that we are thinking. We hypothesise that a person's gaze aversion experience can be mediated through technology, in turn supporting embodied cognition. In this design exploration we present six ideas for interactive technologies that mediate the gaze aversion experience. One of these ideas we developed into “GazeAway”: a prototype that swings a screen into the wearer's field of vision when they perform gaze aversion. Six participants experienced the prototype and based on their interviews, we found that GazeAway changed their gaze aversion experience threefold: increased awareness of gaze aversion behaviour, novel cross-modal perception of gaze aversion behaviour, and changing gaze aversion behaviour to suit social interaction. We hope that ultimately, our design exploration offers a starting point for the design of gaze aversion experiences.

3 versions available

GazeTrak: Exploring Acoustic-based Eye Tracking on a Glass Frame

Year: 2024

Authors: K Li,R Zhang, B Chen,S Chen, S Yin

In this paper, we present GazeTrak, the first acoustic-based eye tracking system on glasses. Our system only needs one speaker and four microphones attached to each side of the glasses. These acoustic sensors capture the formations of the eyeballs and the surrounding areas by emitting encoded inaudible sound towards eyeballs and receiving the reflected signals. These reflected signals are further processed to calculate the echo profiles, which are fed to a customized deep learning pipeline to continuously infer the gaze position. In a user study with 20 participants, GazeTrak achieves an accuracy of 3.6° within the same remounting session and 4.9° across different sessions with a refreshing rate of 83.3 Hz and a power signature of 287.9 mW. Furthermore, we report the performance of our gaze tracking system fully implemented on an MCU with a low-power CNN accelerator (MAX78002). In this configuration, the system runs at up to 83.3 Hz and has a total power signature of 95.4 mW with a 30 Hz FPS.

3 versions available

Group Cycling in Urban Environments: Analyzing Visual Attention, Hazard Perception, and Riding Performance for Enhanced Road Safety

Year: 2024

Authors: M Li, Y Zhang, T Chen, H Du, K Deng

China is a major cycling nation with nearly 400 million bicycles. The widespread use of bicycles effectively alleviates urban traffic congestion. However, safety concerns are prominent, with approximately 35% of cyclists forming groups with family, friends, or colleagues, exerting a significant impact on the traffic system. This study focuses on group cycling, employing urban cycling experiments, GPS trajectory tracking, and eye-tracking to analyze the visual search, hazard perception, and cycling control of both groups and individuals. Findings reveal interdependence in visual attention among group cyclists in busy and complex road conditions, leading to reduced attention to traffic safety targets and potential decreases in risk perception. In terms of lateral control, group cycling exhibits lower lateral deviation and higher steering entropy, particularly at complex intersections. While group cycling results in decreased speed, it forms a clustering advantage at complex intersections, competitively advancing to shorten intersection passage times. Overall, group cyclists differ from individuals in visual, hazard perception, and control aspects, potentially elevating cycling risks. Consequently, there is a need for corresponding traffic safety education and intervention, along with consideration of group cycling characteristics in urban traffic planning to enhance safety and efficiency.

1 version available:

Guiding gaze gestures on smartwatches: Introducing fireworks

Year: 2024

Authors: W Delamare, D Harada, L Yang,X Ren

Smartwatches enable interaction anytime and anywhere, with both digital and augmented physical objects. However, situations with busy hands can prevent user inputs. To address this limitation, we propose Fireworks, an innovative hands-free alternative that empowers smartwatch users to trigger commands effortlessly through intuitive gaze gestures by providing post-activation guidance. Fireworks allows command activation by guiding users to follow targets moving from the screen center to the edge, mimicking real life fireworks. We present the experimental design and evaluation of two Fireworks instances. The first design employs temporal parallelization, displaying few dynamic targets during microinteractions (e.g., snoozing a notification while cooking). The second design sequentially displays targets to support more commands (e.g., 20 commands), ideal for various scenarios other than microinteractions (e.g., turn on lights in a smart home). Results show that Fireworks’ single straight gestures enable faster and more accurate command selection compared to state-of-the-art baselines, namely Orbits and Stroke. Additionally, participants expressed a clear preference for Fireworks’ original visual guidance.

4 versions available

Head-mounted eye tracker videos and raw data collected during breathing recognition attempts in in simulated cardiac arrest

Year: 2024

Authors: M Pedrotti, M Stanek, L Gelin, P Terrier

This paper presents data collected by Pedrotti et al. (2022, 2024) [1][2], which includes videos captured using a Dikablis head-mounted eye tracker (Ergoneers GmbH, Germany), along with the corresponding raw data. The data collection aimed to assess participants' ability to recognize breathing in a simulated cardiac arrest scenario. Equipped with the eye tracker, participants entered a room where a manikin was positioned on the floor. Their task was to determine if the manikin was breathing and respond accordingly, such as initiating cardiopulmonary resuscitation if the victim was not breathing. Our analysis focused on examining looking time on the manikin's thorax by inspecting the videos. Potential applications of the dataset [3] include identifying fixation and saccades using custom algorithms, analyzing pupil diameter data, and conducting secondary analyses involving participant characteristics like age and gender as independent variables.

2 versions available

Immediate Effects of Pencil Push-Up Exercise on Visual Accommodation Skills in Amateur Badminton Players: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Year: 2024

Authors: A Pokaisasawan, The Open Sports Science Journal

Visual skills are crucial for peak athletic performance, with Visual Accommodation (VA) playing a vital role. However, the immediate effects of interventions on VA in sports remain unclear. Objective To investigate the acute effects of a 10-minute Pencil Push-Up (PPU) exercise on VA skills in amateur badminton players. Methods A two-arm, parallel, randomized controlled trial was conducted with twenty-eight amateur badminton players. Participants were matched by age, duration, and frequency of badminton practice, as well as visual health, and randomly assigned to either a Trained Group (TG) or an untrained group (NT). The TG performed a 10-minute PPU exercise, while the NT rested with closed eyes for the same duration. VA parameters, including Amplitude of Accommodation (AA), Accommodative Facility (AF), and Near Point of Convergence (NPC), were assessed before and after the intervention. Results Significant improvements in AA and AF were observed in the TG from pre- to post-intervention (AA: p < .0001, Cohen's d = 1.68; AF: p < .0001, Cohen's d = 3.10). However, no significant changes were observed in NPC (p= .45, Cohen's d =0.60). Furthermore, the TG exhibited greater improvements in AA and AF compared to the NT at post-intervention (AA: 95%CI= [-2.812 to -0.2314], p = .02; AF: 95%CI= [-8.363 to -3.680], p < .0001). No changes were observed in the NT group. Conclusion A single session of pencil push-up exercise acutely enhanced visual accommodation skills, specifically amplitude of accommodation and accommodative facility, in amateur badminton players. This suggests that visual accommodation training methods like pencil push-ups could improve visual performance in sports.

1 version available:

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