Nonintrusive biological signal monitoring in a car to evaluate a driver's stress and health state.

Author(s)
Baek, H.J. Lee, H.B. Kim, J.S. Choi, J.M. Kim, K.K. & Park, K.S.
Year
Abstract

Nonintrusive monitoring of a driver's physiological signals was introduced and evaluated in a car as a test of extending the concept of ubiquitous healthcare to vehicles. Electrocardiogram, photoplethysmogram, galvanic skin response, and respiration were measured in the ubiquitous healthcare car (U-car) using nonintrusively installed sensors on the steering wheel, driver's seat, and seat belt. Measured signals were transmitted to the embedded computer via Bluetooth(R) communication and processed. We collected and analyzed physiological signals during driving in order to estimate a driver's stress state while using this system. In order to compare the effect of stress on physical and mental conditions, two categories of stresses were defined. Experimental results show that a driver's physiological signals were measured with acceptable quality for analysis without interrupting driving, and they were changed meaningfully due to elicited stress. This nonintrusive monitoring can be used to evaluate a driver's state of health and stress. (Author/publisher)

Publication

Library number
20111608 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Telemedicine and e-Health, Vol. 15 (2009), No. 2 (March) p. 182-189, 18 ref.

Our collection

This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.