You can quote several words to match them as a full term:
"some text to search"
otherwise, the single words will be understood as distinct search terms.
ANY of the entered words would match

Removal of Movement Artifacts and Assessment of Mental Stress Analyzing EEG of Non-Driving Passengers under Whole-Body Vibration

The discomfort caused by whole-body vibration (WBV) has long been assessed using subjective surveys or objective measurements of body acceleration.

Removal of Movement Artifacts and Assessment of Mental Stress Analyzing EEG of Non-Driving Passengers under Whole-Body Vibration

However, surveys have the disadvantage that some of participants often express their feelings in a capricious manner, and acceleration data cannot take into account individual preferences and experiences of their emotions. In this study, we investigated vibration-induced mental stress using the electroencephalogram (EEG) of 22 seated occupants excited by random vibrations. Between the acceleration and the EEG signal, which contains electrical noise due to the head shaking caused by random vibrations, we found that there was a strong correlation, which acts as an artifact in the EEG, and therefore we removed it using an adaptive filter. After removing the artifact, we analyzed the characteristics of the brainwaves using topographic maps and observed that the activities detected in the frontal electrodes showed significant differences between the static and vibration conditions. Further, frontal alpha asymmetry (FAA) and relative band power indices in the frontal electrodes were analyzed statistically to assess mental stress under WBV. As the vibration level increased, EEG analysis in the frontal electrodes showed a decrease in FAA and alpha power but an increase in gamma power.

These results are in good agreement with the literature in the sense that FAA and alpha band power decreases with increasing stress, thus demonstrating that WBV causes mental stress and that the stress increases with the vibration level. EEG assessment of stress during WBV is expected to be used in the evaluation of ride comfort alongside existing selfreport and acceleration methods.

Read the full article at the original website

References:

Subscribe to The Article Feed

Don’t miss out on the latest articles. Sign up now to get access to the library of members-only articles.
jamie@example.com
Subscribe