4,386 research outputs found
Driver Distraction Identification with an Ensemble of Convolutional Neural Networks
The World Health Organization (WHO) reported 1.25 million deaths yearly due
to road traffic accidents worldwide and the number has been continuously
increasing over the last few years. Nearly fifth of these accidents are caused
by distracted drivers. Existing work of distracted driver detection is
concerned with a small set of distractions (mostly, cell phone usage).
Unreliable ad-hoc methods are often used.In this paper, we present the first
publicly available dataset for driver distraction identification with more
distraction postures than existing alternatives. In addition, we propose a
reliable deep learning-based solution that achieves a 90% accuracy. The system
consists of a genetically-weighted ensemble of convolutional neural networks,
we show that a weighted ensemble of classifiers using a genetic algorithm
yields in a better classification confidence. We also study the effect of
different visual elements in distraction detection by means of face and hand
localizations, and skin segmentation. Finally, we present a thinned version of
our ensemble that could achieve 84.64% classification accuracy and operate in a
real-time environment.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1706.0949
Recommended from our members
Dynamic low-level context for the detection of mild traumatic brain injury.
Mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) appears as low contrast lesions in magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. Standard automated detection approaches cannot detect the subtle changes caused by the lesions. The use of context has become integral for the detection of low contrast objects in images. Context is any information that can be used for object detection but is not directly due to the physical appearance of an object in an image. In this paper, new low-level static and dynamic context features are proposed and integrated into a discriminative voxel-level classifier to improve the detection of mTBI lesions. Visual features, including multiple texture measures, are used to give an initial estimate of a lesion. From the initial estimate novel proximity and directional distance, contextual features are calculated and used as features for another classifier. This feature takes advantage of spatial information given by the initial lesion estimate using only the visual features. Dynamic context is captured by the proposed posterior marginal edge distance context feature, which measures the distance from a hard estimate of the lesion at a previous time point. The approach is validated on a temporal mTBI rat model dataset and shown to have improved dice score and convergence compared to other state-of-the-art approaches. Analysis of feature importance and versatility of the approach on other datasets are also provided
- …