Abstract
We are developing a large-scale real-world driving database of more than 200 drivers using a data collection vehicle equipped with various sensors for the synchronous recording of multimedia data including speech, video, driving behavior, and physiological signals. Driver’s speech and videos are captured with multi-channel microphones and cameras. Gas and brake pedal pressures, steering angles, vehicle velocities, and following distances are measured using pressure sensors, a potentiometer, a velocity pulse counter, and distance sensors, respectively. Physiological sensors are mounted to measure driver’s heart rate, skin conductance, and emotion-based sweating. The multimedia data is collected under four different task conditions while driving on urban roads and an expressway. Data collection is currently underway and to date 151 drivers have participated in the experiment. Data collection is being conducted in international collaboration with the United States and Europe. This chapter reports on our on-going driving data collection in Japan.
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Acknowledgments
This work is partially supported by a NEDO grant “International Research Coordination of Driving Behavior Signal Processing Based on Large Scale Real World Database.”
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Miyajima, C., Kusakawa, T., Nishino, T., Kitaoka, N., Itou, K., Takeda, K. (2009). On-Going Data Collection of Driving Behavior Signals. In: Takeda, K., Erdogan, H., Hansen, J.H.L., Abut, H. (eds) In-Vehicle Corpus and Signal Processing for Driver Behavior. Springer, Boston, MA. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-79582-9_4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-79582-9_4
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