Frontiers in Human Neuroscience (Feb 2022)

Neural Correlates Predicting Lane-Keeping and Hazard Detection: An fMRI Study Featuring a Pedestrian-Rich Simulator Environment

  • Kentaro Oba,
  • Koji Hamada,
  • Azumi Tanabe-Ishibashi,
  • Fumihiko Murase,
  • Masaaki Hirose,
  • Ryuta Kawashima,
  • Ryuta Kawashima,
  • Motoaki Sugiura,
  • Motoaki Sugiura,
  • Motoaki Sugiura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2022.754379
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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Distracted attention is considered responsible for most car accidents, and many functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) researchers have addressed its neural correlates using a car-driving simulator. Previous studies, however, have not directly addressed safe driving performance and did not place pedestrians in the simulator environment. In this fMRI study, we simulated a pedestrian-rich environment to explore the neural correlates of three types of safe driving performance: accurate lane-keeping during driving (driving accuracy), the braking response to a preceding car, and the braking response to a crossing pedestrian. Activation of the bilateral frontoparietal control network predicted high driving accuracy. On the other hand, activation of the left posterior and right anterior superior temporal sulci preceding a sudden pedestrian crossing predicted a slow braking response. The results suggest the involvement of different cognitive processes in different components of driving safety: the facilitatory effect of maintained attention on driving accuracy and the distracting effect of social–cognitive processes on the braking response to pedestrians.

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