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A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees

When assessing trainees’ progresses during a driving training program, instructors can only rely on the evaluation of a trainee’s explicit behavior and their performance, without having any insight about the training effects at a cognitive level. However, being able to drive does not imply knowing h...

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Autores principales: Di Flumeri, Gianluca, Giorgi, Andrea, Germano, Daniele, Ronca, Vincenzo, Vozzi, Alessia, Borghini, Gianluca, Tamborra, Luca, Simonetti, Ilaria, Capotorto, Rossella, Ferrara, Silvia, Sciaraffa, Nicolina, Babiloni, Fabio, Aricò, Pietro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10610858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37896483
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23208389
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author Di Flumeri, Gianluca
Giorgi, Andrea
Germano, Daniele
Ronca, Vincenzo
Vozzi, Alessia
Borghini, Gianluca
Tamborra, Luca
Simonetti, Ilaria
Capotorto, Rossella
Ferrara, Silvia
Sciaraffa, Nicolina
Babiloni, Fabio
Aricò, Pietro
author_facet Di Flumeri, Gianluca
Giorgi, Andrea
Germano, Daniele
Ronca, Vincenzo
Vozzi, Alessia
Borghini, Gianluca
Tamborra, Luca
Simonetti, Ilaria
Capotorto, Rossella
Ferrara, Silvia
Sciaraffa, Nicolina
Babiloni, Fabio
Aricò, Pietro
author_sort Di Flumeri, Gianluca
collection PubMed
description When assessing trainees’ progresses during a driving training program, instructors can only rely on the evaluation of a trainee’s explicit behavior and their performance, without having any insight about the training effects at a cognitive level. However, being able to drive does not imply knowing how to drive safely in a complex scenario such as the road traffic. Indeed, the latter point involves mental aspects, such as the ability to manage and allocate one’s mental effort appropriately, which are difficult to assess objectively. In this scenario, this study investigates the validity of deploying an electroencephalographic neurometric of mental effort, obtained through a wearable electroencephalographic device, to improve the assessment of the trainee. The study engaged 22 young people, without or with limited driving experience. They were asked to drive along five different but similar urban routes, while their brain activity was recorded through electroencephalography. Moreover, driving performance, subjective and reaction times measures were collected for a multimodal analysis. In terms of subjective and performance measures, no driving improvement could be detected either through the driver’s subjective measures or through their driving performance. On the other side, through the electroencephalographic neurometric of mental effort, it was possible to catch their improvement in terms of mental performance, with a decrease in experienced mental demand after three repetitions of the driving training tasks. These results were confirmed by the analysis of reaction times, that significantly improved from the third repetition as well. Therefore, being able to measure when a task is less mentally demanding, and so more automatic, allows to deduce the degree of users training, becoming capable of handling additional tasks and reacting to unexpected events.
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spelling pubmed-106108582023-10-28 A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees Di Flumeri, Gianluca Giorgi, Andrea Germano, Daniele Ronca, Vincenzo Vozzi, Alessia Borghini, Gianluca Tamborra, Luca Simonetti, Ilaria Capotorto, Rossella Ferrara, Silvia Sciaraffa, Nicolina Babiloni, Fabio Aricò, Pietro Sensors (Basel) Article When assessing trainees’ progresses during a driving training program, instructors can only rely on the evaluation of a trainee’s explicit behavior and their performance, without having any insight about the training effects at a cognitive level. However, being able to drive does not imply knowing how to drive safely in a complex scenario such as the road traffic. Indeed, the latter point involves mental aspects, such as the ability to manage and allocate one’s mental effort appropriately, which are difficult to assess objectively. In this scenario, this study investigates the validity of deploying an electroencephalographic neurometric of mental effort, obtained through a wearable electroencephalographic device, to improve the assessment of the trainee. The study engaged 22 young people, without or with limited driving experience. They were asked to drive along five different but similar urban routes, while their brain activity was recorded through electroencephalography. Moreover, driving performance, subjective and reaction times measures were collected for a multimodal analysis. In terms of subjective and performance measures, no driving improvement could be detected either through the driver’s subjective measures or through their driving performance. On the other side, through the electroencephalographic neurometric of mental effort, it was possible to catch their improvement in terms of mental performance, with a decrease in experienced mental demand after three repetitions of the driving training tasks. These results were confirmed by the analysis of reaction times, that significantly improved from the third repetition as well. Therefore, being able to measure when a task is less mentally demanding, and so more automatic, allows to deduce the degree of users training, becoming capable of handling additional tasks and reacting to unexpected events. MDPI 2023-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10610858/ /pubmed/37896483 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23208389 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Di Flumeri, Gianluca
Giorgi, Andrea
Germano, Daniele
Ronca, Vincenzo
Vozzi, Alessia
Borghini, Gianluca
Tamborra, Luca
Simonetti, Ilaria
Capotorto, Rossella
Ferrara, Silvia
Sciaraffa, Nicolina
Babiloni, Fabio
Aricò, Pietro
A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title_full A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title_fullStr A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title_full_unstemmed A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title_short A Neuroergonomic Approach Fostered by Wearable EEG for the Multimodal Assessment of Drivers Trainees
title_sort neuroergonomic approach fostered by wearable eeg for the multimodal assessment of drivers trainees
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10610858/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37896483
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s23208389
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