Motion Sickness Modeling with Visual Vertical Estimation and Its Application to Autonomous Personal Mobility Vehicles

02/13/2022
by   Hailong Liu, et al.
3

Passengers (drivers) of level 3-5 autonomous personal mobility vehicles (APMV) and cars can perform non-driving tasks, such as reading books and smartphones, while driving. It has been pointed out that such activities may increase motion sickness. Many studies have been conducted to build countermeasures, of which various computational motion sickness models have been developed. Many of these are based on subjective vertical conflict (SVC) theory, which describes vertical changes in direction sensed by human sensory organs vs. those expected by the central nervous system. Such models are expected to be applied to autonomous driving scenarios. However, no current computational model can integrate visual vertical information with vestibular sensations. We proposed a 6 DoF SVC-VV model which add a visually perceived vertical block into a conventional six-degrees-of-freedom SVC model to predict VV directions from image data simulating the visual input of a human. Hence, a simple image-based VV estimation method is proposed. As the validation of the proposed model, this paper focuses on describing the fact that the motion sickness increases as a passenger reads a book while using an AMPV, assuming that visual vertical (VV) plays an important role. In the static experiment, it is demonstrated that the estimated VV by the proposed method accurately described the gravitational acceleration direction with a low mean absolute deviation. In addition, the results of the driving experiment using an APMV demonstrated that the proposed 6 DoF SVC-VV model could describe that the increased motion sickness experienced when the VV and gravitational acceleration directions were different.

READ FULL TEXT

page 1

page 4

page 6

page 7

research
02/17/2023

Subjective Vertical Conflict Model with Visual Vertical: Predicting Motion Sickness on Autonomous Personal Mobility Vehicles

Passengers of level 3-5 autonomous personal mobility vehicles (APMV) can...
research
05/29/2023

Generating Visual Information for Motion Sickness Reduction Using a Computational Model Based on SVC Theory

With the advancements in automated driving, there is concern that motion...
research
11/29/2021

Towards Autonomous Driving of Personal Mobility with Small and Noisy Dataset using Tsallis-statistics-based Behavioral Cloning

Autonomous driving has made great progress and been introduced in practi...
research
07/07/2023

The impact of body and head dynamics on motion comfort assessment

Head motion is a key determinant of motion comfort and differs substanti...
research
04/29/2019

A New Method for Atlanta World Frame Estimation

In this paper, we propose a new Atlanta frame estimation method by consi...
research
05/25/2009

A New Solution to the Relative Orientation Problem using only 3 Points and the Vertical Direction

This paper presents a new method to recover the relative pose between tw...
research
06/05/2023

Segregated FLS Processing Cores for V/STOL Autonomous Landing Guidance Assistant System using FPGA

It is highly predicted that the roads and parking areas will be extremel...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset