European Transport Research Review (Aug 2019)

Electrophysiological and performance variations following driving events involving an increase in mental workload

  • Hugo Loeches De La Fuente,
  • Catherine Berthelon,
  • Alexandra Fort,
  • Virginie Etienne,
  • Marleen De Weser,
  • Jonas Ambeck,
  • Christophe Jallais

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12544-019-0379-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract This study aimed at investigating how driver’s mental workload could be assessed during driving, using driving performance as well as electrophysiological and subjective data. Participants had to follow a lead vehicle at a safe and constant distance and to deal with two particular driving events (overtaking and pedestrian occurrence) within two sessions (baseline and experimental) on a driving simulator. Traffic density and time pressure (overtaking event) and time pressure (pedestrian event) were increased in the experimental session in order to induce a higher workload. Participants filled NASA TLX questionnaire after each driving session. Electrophysiological parameters (SCL, ECG), driving performance (SDLP and response to speed change of the lead vehicle: coherence, delay and gain) were analysed after each event in two temporal windows (30 s and 5 min). Results showed that both performance and physiological variables differed as a function of traffic conditions and time pressure. Moreover, while performance variations were systematically observed over a long period (5 min after the events), effects on mean SCL data obtained from experimental session notably differed from baseline values within 30 s after the events. Results are discussed in term of mental workload and suggestions are made about the safety systems that could monitor driver’s mental state.

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