Author:
Wang Quan,Zhu Feiyu,Dang Ruochen,Wei Xiaojie,Han Gongen,Huang Jinhua,Hu Bingliang
Abstract
AbstractEmotions have specific effects on behavior. At present, studies are increasingly interested in how emotions affect driving behavior. We designed the experiment by combing driving tasks and eye tracking. DSM-V assessment scale was applied to evaluate the depression and manic for participants. In order to explore the dual impacts of emotional issues and cognitive load on attention mechanism, we defined the safety-related region as the area of interest (AOI) and quantified the concentration of eye tracking data. Participants with depression issues had lower AOI sample percentage and shorter AOI fixation duration under no external cognitive load. During our experiment, the depression group had the lowest accuracy in arithmetic quiz. Additionally, we used full connected network to detect the depression group from the control group, reached 83.33%. Our experiment supported that depression have negative influences on driving behavior. Participants with depression issues reduced attention to the safety-related region under no external cognitive load, they were more prone to have difficulties in multitasking when faced with high cognitive load. Besides, participants tended to reallocate more attention resources to the central area under high cognitive load, a phenomenon we called "visual centralization" in driving behavior.
Funder
“From 0 to 1” Original Innovation Project of the Basic Frontier Scientific Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
Autonomous Deployment Project of Xi’an Institute of Optics and Precision Mechanics of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC