Hanadi Alhamdan

2papers

2 Papers

5.6LGMay 22Code
CBANet: A Compact Attention-Based CNN-BiLSTM Network for Aggressive Driving Event Detection

Hanadi Alhamdan, Ghadah Alosaimi, Amir Atapour-Abarghouei et al.

Aggressive driving is a major cause of traffic accidents and poses a serious threat to road safety. Although deep learning methods have shown promising results in detecting risky driving behaviours from vehicle sensor data, their performance in real-world conditions is often limited by severe data imbalance, large variability between drivers, and the lack of physically interpretable vehicle dynamics representations. In this paper, we propose an enhanced deep learning framework for aggressive driving detection using multivariate vehicle dynamics signals. Instead of relying solely on raw measurements, the proposed approach constructs engineered dynamic features that capture steering, acceleration, and braking behaviour. To address the extreme rarity of aggressive events in naturalistic driving data, we introduce a stable training strategy that combines controlled SMOTE-based oversampling with a class-weighted loss formulation, and evaluates focal loss variants for imbalance handling. Furthermore, a safety-oriented decision strategy based on class-specific threshold calibration is adopted to better reflect the asymmetric risks of missed detections and false alarms in real-world applications. The proposed framework is evaluated on a newly collected naturalistic driving dataset. Extensive experiments show that the proposed method consistently outperforms standard deep learning baselines with significant improvements in minority-class recall and safety-critical F-score metrics while maintaining practical computational efficiency. Code: \url {https://github.com/halhamdan/CBANet}

8.7CVApr 21Code
Mind2Drive: Predicting Driver Intentions from EEG in Real-world On-Road Driving

Ghadah Alosaimi, Hanadi Alhamdan, Wenke E et al.

Predicting driver intention from neurophysiological signals offers a promising pathway for enhancing proactive safety in advanced driver assistance systems, yet remains challenging in real-world driving due to EEG signal non-stationarity and the complexity of cognitive-motor preparation. This study proposes and evaluates an EEG-based driver intention prediction framework using a synchronised multi-sensor platform integrated into a real electric vehicle. A real-world on-road dataset was collected across 32 driving sessions, and 12 deep learning architectures were evaluated under consistent experimental conditions. Among the evaluated architectures, TSCeption achieved the highest average accuracy (0.907) and Macro-F1 score (0.901). The proposed framework demonstrates strong temporal stability, maintaining robust decoding performance up to 1000 ms before manoeuvre execution with minimal degradation. Furthermore, additional analyses reveal that minimal EEG preprocessing outperforms artefact-handling pipelines, and prediction performance peaks within a 400-600 ms interval, corresponding to a critical neural preparatory phase preceding driving manoeuvres. Overall, these findings support the feasibility of early and stable EEG-based driver intention decoding under real-world on-road conditions. Code: https://github.com/galosaimi/Mind2Drive.