This article focuses on monitoring a driver's cognitive impairment due to talking to passengers or on a mobile phone, daydreaming, or just thinking about other than driving-related matters. This paper describes an investigation of cognitive distraction, firstly, giving an overall idea of its effects on the driver and, secondly, discussing the practical implementation of an algorithm for detection of cognitive distraction using a support vector machine (SVM) classifier. The evaluation data have been gathered by recruiting 12 professional drivers to drive for approximately 45 min in various environments and inducing cognitive tasks, i.e. arithmetic calculations. According to the prior knowledge and the experimental analysis, gaze, head and lane-keeping variances over a 15 s time window were selected indicative features. The SVM classifier's performance was optimized through exhaustive parameter tuning. The executed tests show that the cognitive workload can be detected with approximately 65-80 per cent confidence despite the fact that the test material represented medium-difficulty cognitive tasks (i.e. the induced workload was not very high). Thus, it could be assumed that a more challenging cognitive task would yield better detection results.
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