Journal article

Stationary gaze entropy predicts lane departure events in sleep-deprived drivers

BA Shiferaw, LA Downey, J Westlake, B Stevens, SMW Rajaratnam, DJ Berlowitz, P Swann, ME Howard

Scientific Reports | NATURE PORTFOLIO | Published : 2018

Abstract

Performance decrement associated with sleep deprivation is a leading contributor to traffic accidents and fatalities. While current research has focused on eye blink parameters as physiological indicators of driver drowsiness, little is understood of how gaze behaviour alters as a result of sleep deprivation. In particular, the effect of sleep deprivation on gaze entropy has not been previously examined. In this randomised, repeated measures study, 9 (4 male, 5 female) healthy participants completed two driving sessions in a fully instrumented vehicle (1 after a night of sleep deprivation and 1 after normal sleep) on a closed track, during which eye movement activity and lane departure event..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

M.E.H. has received research grants from the Cooperative Research Centre (CRC) for Alertness, Safety and Productivity and the Mining CRC, and loan equipment for research from Optalert, Seeing Machines and Edansafe. L.A.D. is supported by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Career Development Fellowship (APP1122577). B.A.S. is supported through Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship.