DocumentCode :
3501059
Title :
Unsupervised drive topic finding from driving behavioral data
Author :
Bando, Takashi ; Takenaka, Kana ; Nagasaka, Shogo ; Taniguchi, Takafumi
Author_Institution :
Corp. R&D Div. 3, DENSO Corp., Kariya, Japan
fYear :
2013
fDate :
23-26 June 2013
Firstpage :
177
Lastpage :
182
Abstract :
Continuous driving-behavioral data can be converted automatically into sequences of “drive topics” in natural language; for example, “gas pedal operating,” “high-speed cruise,” then “stopping and standing still with brakes on.” In regard to developing advanced driver-assistance systems (ADASs), various methods for recognizing driver behavior have been proposed. Most of these methods employ a supervised approach based on human tags. Unfortunately, preparing complete annotations is practically impossible with massive driving-behavioral data because of the great variety of driving scenes. To overcome that difficulty, in this study, a double articulation analyzer (DAA) is used to segment continuous driving-behavioral data into sequences of discrete driving scenes. Thereafter, latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) is used for clustering the driving scenes into a small number of so-called “drive topics” according to emergence frequency of physical features observed in the scenes. Because both DAA and LDA are unsupervised methods, they achieve data-driven scene segmentation and drive topic estimation without human tags. Labels of the extracted drive topics are also determined automatically by using distributions of the physical behavioral features included in each drive topic. The proposed framework therefore translates the output of sensors monitoring the driver and the driving environment into natural language. Efficiency of proposed method is evaluated by using a massive data set of driving behavior, including 90 drives for more than 78 hours over 3700km in total.
Keywords :
behavioural sciences computing; feature extraction; image recognition; image segmentation; pattern clustering; traffic engineering computing; unsupervised learning; ADAS; DAA; advanced driver-assistance systems; continuous driving-behavioral data; data annotation; data-driven scene segmentation; double articulation analyzer; drive topic estimation; drive topics extraction label; driver behavior recognition; driving scene clustering; latent Dirichlet allocation; natural language; unsupervised drive topic finding; unsupervised learning methods; Drives; Estimation; Feature extraction; Hidden Markov models; Natural languages; Roads; Vehicles;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Intelligent Vehicles Symposium (IV), 2013 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Gold Coast, QLD
ISSN :
1931-0587
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-2754-1
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IVS.2013.6629467
Filename :
6629467
Link To Document :
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