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Journal Article

Citation

Li T, Lin Y, Gao Y, Zhong F. J. Biophotonics 2018; 11(12): e201800160.

Affiliation

State Key Lab Elect Thin Film & Integrated Device, University of Electronic Science & Technology of China, Chengdu, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/jbio.201800160

PMID

29978590

Abstract

Drowsy driving contributes to ~20% of all traffic accidents worldwide. Onsite monitoring the mental condition of a driver and forewarning may be a preventive solution to reduce occurrence of drowsiness and potential accidents. Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) has been successfully utilized in hemodynamics-interpreted functional activity in preliminary voluntary attention experiments. Here, we monitored hemodynamic alternations using fNIRS upon the prefrontal cortex over 13 volunteers in the course of a 7-hour driving simulation and evaluated their reaction capability with a voluntary attention test based on Go/NoGo paradigm. A degradation in attention test score (Accuracy/RT) as well as the elevations in oxy-hemoglobin (Δ[HbO2 ]) and total hemoglobin (Δ[tHb]) were found significantly correlated with driving duration (Accuracy/RT: r = -0.964, p < 0.001; Δ[HbO2 ]: r = 0.950, p < 0.001; Δ[tHb]: r = 0.852, p = 0.007). The hemodynamic parameters are in significant inverse correlations with Accuracy/RT (Δ[HbO2 ]: r = -0.896, p = 0.003; Δ[tHb]: r = -0.844, p = 0.008), indicating the potential to forewarn drivers the attention degradation with onsite fNIRS measurements. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Behavioral performance; Cerebral hemodynamics; Drowsy driving; Functional near-infrared spectroscopy; Voluntary attention

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