Title
Estimation Of Mental Workload Using Saccadic Eye Movements In A Free-Viewing Task
Abstract
This study proposes a new method to automatically estimate a person's mental workload (MWL) using a specific type of eye movements called saccadic intrusions (SI). Previously, the most accurate existing method to estimate MWL was the pupil diameter measure [1]. However, pupil diameter is not practical in a vehicle driving environment because it is overly sensitive to brightness changes. A new method should be independent from environment brightness changes, robust in most driving environments, and accurately reflect MWL.This study used SI as an indicator of MWL because eye movements, including SI, are independent from brightness changes. SI are a specific type of eye-gaze deviations. SI are known to be closely related to cognitive activities [2], [3]. This means that SI may be also closely related to MWL.Eye movements were recorded using a non-intrusive eye tracking camera, located 550 mm away from a participant. Participants were instructed to move their eye gaze to examine a highway driving scenery picture. In the data set of the recorded eye movements, our new algorithm detected SI and quantified SI behavior into a SI measure.Participants were also engaged in a secondary N-back task. The N-back task is a popular task used in cognitive sciences to systematically control a MWL level of participants. In our results, all 14 participants exhibited more SI eye movements when their MWL level was high compared to when their MWL level was low. Moreover, our results showed that the SI measure was a more accurate measure of MWL than the pupil diameter measure.This finding indicates that MWL of the person can be estimated by observation of SI eye movements. This new method has a wide range of applications. One of them is to predict a person's MWL, thus predicting when a person is capable of driving a vehicle in a safe or dangerous manner.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1109/IEMBS.2011.6091121
2011 ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY (EMBC)
Keywords
Field
DocType
human factors,eye tracking,spatial resolution,eye movement,tracking,patient monitoring,visualization,occupational safety,suicide prevention,ergonomics,vehicle tracking,injury prevention,biomechanics,vision,cognition,eye gaze,neurophysiology,silicon,cognitive science
Computer vision,Workload,Computer science,Vehicle driving,Eye tracking,Eye movement,Pupil diameter,Artificial intelligence,Cognition,Saccadic masking,Brightness
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
2011
1557-170X
6
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.81
1
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Tokuda Satoru160.81
G Obinata2154.16
Evan M. Palmer3112.32
Chaparro Alex460.81