Browse Publications Technical Papers 2019-01-0875
2019-04-02

“Fitting Data”: A Case Study on Effective Driver Distraction State Classification 2019-01-0875

The goal of this project was to investigate how to make driver distraction state classification more efficient by applying selected machine learning techniques to existing datasets. The data set used in this project included both overt driver behavior measures (e.g., lane keeping and headway measures) and indices of internal cognitive processes (e.g., driver situation awareness responses) collected under four distraction conditions, including no-distraction, visual-manual distraction only, cognitive distraction only, and dual distraction conditions. The baseline classification method that we employed was a support vector machine (SVM) to first identify driver states of visual-manual distraction and then to identify any cognitive-related distraction among the visual-manual distraction cases and other non-visual manual distraction cases. The new aspect of this research is optimization of the classification effort, which involved cardinality constraints on 16 overt driver behavior measures. A spline transformation was also implemented to achieve better classification performance. In addition to testing our optimization approach with the SVM, we also explored logistic regression. Results revealed the spline-transformed variables to produce a good “out-of-sample” performance for both the SVM and logistic regression. Beyond this, the cardinality constraints were important for selection of the most influential variables in driver state classification accuracy and preventing data overfitting. Regarding the objective of efficiency in distraction classification, with only two input variables our optimized approach achieved state classification accuracies similar to accuracies achieved with “brute-force” application of SVM with all 16 overt driver behavior measures as inputs. Interestingly, with splined- transformed variables, reducing the number of input variables to 2 only led to a marginal decrease in classification accuracy (75.38% to 74.16%). The optimization methods explored in this paper could be applied to other in-vehicle real-time data to reduce computational demands in using machine learning methods for driver state classification.

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