Classification levels help Safety Managers to save time by highlighting incidents that are important to review and prioritize action. Addressing high-risk driving behaviors helps you to focus your efforts and improve fleet safety. The cloud AI classifies videos as Critical, Major, Moderate, or Minor to indicate how urgently you should watch them.
In this articleWhen you receive a video notification, do the following:
- Watch the video
- Determine the action required, and urgency
- Update the classification level, if required.
- Update the event’s coaching status
- Host a driver coaching session
- Customize a fleet's AI driving assistance settings (AI Dashcams only).
When talking to a driver, bear in mind that driving behaviors can be triggered by both unsafe driving and safe driving, such as evasive maneuvers.
When an event is triggered by an unsafe driving behavior, it is uploaded to Reveal and reviewed by the cloud AI. The cloud AI analyzes the event, detects additional driving behaviors. Then a classification is applied.
The classification levels are generated based on a number of factors, including:
- The behavior risk associated with the driving behavior. Where there are multiple events, the cloud AI classifies the most severe behavior that occurred
- How severely the driver braked, accelerated, cornered, or encountered a sudden force to the vehicle
- How close other vehicles, people, animals, or objects were
- The g-force exerted on the front or rear of the vehicle
- The speed of the vehicle.
- Whether the driver was distracted inside the cab.
All driving behaviors are part of a classified event which are used in the calculation of the driver safety score. This includes Minor events.
Learn how classifications affect the Video driver safety score.
A Collision was detected and the driver lost control of the vehicle. The impact can range from severe to light. For example, the vehicle:
- Collided with a person, object, or another vehicle
- Left the road
- Spun out of control
- Mounted a curb
- Had a tire explode.
The vehicle may have been involved in a dangerous situation. One or both of the following happened:
- One or more unsafe driving behaviors were detected and at least one behavior was severe.
For example, the driver was not wearing their seat belt while traveling at high speed, or tailgating the vehicle in front closely at high speed. - A Near miss was detected. This happens when a collision was avoided that could have resulted in:
- Damage to a vehicle and/or object
- Injury to a person and/or animal.
For example, the driver swerves to avoid a vehicle, person, animal and/or object, which is detected very close by.
The driving manner was inappropriate to the situation. One or more unsafe driving behaviors were detected and at least one behavior was harsh.
For example, the driver was not wearing their seat belt while traveling at low speed, or tailgating the vehicle in front.
Example 1
The vehicle begins to cross a solid painted line representing the lane boundary. The vehicle speed is slow, and the road is empty of other vehicles, people and objects. Therefore the classification is level is Minor.
Example 2
The driver brakes harshly while smoking, and a collision occurs. The vehicle speed is high, and the road is busy with other vehicles. Therefore the classification is level is Critical.
Triggers can be detected by both the vehicle tracker and the camera AI (AI Dashcams only). Other behaviors are detected by the cloud AI.
Users with coaching permissions can update a classification level within 14 days of an event occurring. In a video event’s analysis box, click the applied classification (Minor, Moderate, Major or Critical) and select an alternative.
Changing the event classification recalculates the the fleet average safety score, as well as the assigned driver’s:
- Video safety score
- Safety score trend in the Drivers tab
- Safety profile.
Note: The update of these features takes a few hours.