7,583 research outputs found

    Facial feature representation and recognition

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    Facial expression provides an important behavioral measure for studies of emotion, cognitive processes, and social interaction. Facial expression representation and recognition have become a promising research area during recent years. Its applications include human-computer interfaces, human emotion analysis, and medical care and cure. In this dissertation, the fundamental techniques will be first reviewed, and the developments of the novel algorithms and theorems will be presented later. The objective of the proposed algorithm is to provide a reliable, fast, and integrated procedure to recognize either seven prototypical, emotion-specified expressions (e.g., happy, neutral, angry, disgust, fear, sad, and surprise in JAFFE database) or the action units in CohnKanade AU-coded facial expression image database. A new application area developed by the Infant COPE project is the recognition of neonatal facial expressions of pain (e.g., air puff, cry, friction, pain, and rest in Infant COPE database). It has been reported in medical literature that health care professionals have difficulty in distinguishing newborn\u27s facial expressions of pain from facial reactions of other stimuli. Since pain is a major indicator of medical problems and the quality of patient care depends on the quality of pain management, it is vital that the methods to be developed should accurately distinguish an infant\u27s signal of pain from a host of minor distress signal. The evaluation protocol used in the Infant COPE project considers two conditions: person-dependent and person-independent. The person-dependent means that some data of a subject are used for training and other data of the subject for testing. The person-independent means that the data of all subjects except one are used for training and this left-out one subject is used for testing. In this dissertation, both evaluation protocols are experimented. The Infant COPE research of neonatal pain classification is a first attempt at applying the state-of-the-art face recognition technologies to actual medical problems. The objective of Infant COPE project is to bypass these observational problems by developing a machine classification system to diagnose neonatal facial expressions of pain. Since assessment of pain by machine is based on pixel states, a machine classification system of pain will remain objective and will exploit the full spectrum of information available in a neonate\u27s facial expressions. Furthermore, it will be capable of monitoring neonate\u27s facial expressions when he/she is left unattended. Experimental results using the Infant COPE database and evaluation protocols indicate that the application of face classification techniques in pain assessment and management is a promising area of investigation. One of the challenging problems for building an automatic facial expression recognition system is how to automatically locate the principal facial parts since most existing algorithms capture the necessary face parts by cropping images manually. In this dissertation, two systems are developed to detect facial features, especially for eyes. The purpose is to develop a fast and reliable system to detect facial features automatically and correctly. By combining the proposed facial feature detection, the facial expression and neonatal pain recognition systems can be robust and efficient

    CGAMES'2009

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    Leveraging Multi-Modal Sensing for Mobile Health: A Case Review in Chronic Pain

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    Active and passive mobile sensing has garnered much attention in recent years. In this paper, we focus on chronic pain measurement and management as a case application to exemplify the state of the art. We present a consolidated discussion on the leveraging of various sensing modalities along with modular server-side and on-device architectures required for this task. Modalities included are: activity monitoring from accelerometry and location sensing, audio analysis of speech, image processing for facial expressions as well as modern methods for effective patient self-reporting. We review examples that deliver actionable information to clinicians and patients while addressing privacy, usability, and computational constraints. We also discuss open challenges in the higher level inferencing of patient state and effective feedback with potential directions to address them. The methods and challenges presented here are also generalizable and relevant to a broad range of other applications in mobile sensing

    Neurological and Mental Disorders

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    Mental disorders can result from disruption of neuronal circuitry, damage to the neuronal and non-neuronal cells, altered circuitry in the different regions of the brain and any changes in the permeability of the blood brain barrier. Early identification of these impairments through investigative means could help to improve the outcome for many brain and behaviour disease states.The chapters in this book describe how these abnormalities can lead to neurological and mental diseases such as ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder), anxiety disorders, Alzheimer’s disease and personality and eating disorders. Psycho-social traumas, especially during childhood, increase the incidence of amnesia and transient global amnesia, leading to the temporary inability to create new memories.Early detection of these disorders could benefit many complex diseases such as schizophrenia and depression

    Training Effects of Adaptive Emotive Responses From Animated Agents in Simulated Environments

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    Humans are distinct from machines in their capacity to emote, stimulate, and express emotions. Because emotions play such an important role in human interactions, human-like agents used in pedagogical roles for simulation-based training should properly reflect emotions. Currently, research concerning the development of this type of agent focuses on basic agent interface characteristics, as well as character building qualities. However, human-like agents should provide emotion-like qualities that are clearly expressed, properly synchronized, and that simulate complex, real-time interactions through adaptive emotion systems. The research conducted for this dissertation was a quantitative investigation using 3 (within) x 2 (between) x 3 (within) factorial design. A total of 56 paid participants consented to complete the study. Independent variables included emotion intensity (i.e., low, moderate, and high emotion), levels of expertise (novice participant versus experienced participant), and number of trials. Dependent measures included visual attention, emotional response towards the animated agents, simulation performance score, and learners\u27 perception of the pedagogical agent persona while participants interacted with a pain assessment and management simulation. While no relationships were indicated between the levels of emotion intensity portrayed by the animated agents and the participants\u27 visual attention, emotional response towards the animated agent, and simulation performance score, there were significant relationships between the level of expertise of the participant and the visual attention, emotional responses, and performance outcomes. The results indicated that nursing students had higher visual attention during their interaction with the animated agents. Additionally, nursing students expressed more neutral facial expression whereas experienced nurses expressed more emotional facial expressions towards the animated agents. The results of the simulation performance scores indicated that nursing students obtained higher performance scores in the pain assessment and management task than experienced nurses. Both groups of participants had a positive perception of the animated agents persona

    Hanshagata hikari sensagun o umekonda sumāto aiwea ni yoru hyƍjƍ shikibetsu

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    Psychologie und Gehirn 2007

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    Die Fachtagung "Psychologie und Gehirn" ist eine traditionelle Tagung aus dem Bereich psychophysiologischer Grundlagenforschung. 2007 fand diese Veranstaltung, die 33. Jahrestagung der „Deutschen Gesellschaft fĂŒr Psychophysiologie und ihre Anwendungen (DGPA)“, in Dortmund unter der Schirmherrschaft des Instituts fĂŒr Arbeitsphysiologie (IfADo) statt. Neben der Grundlagenforschung ist auch die Umsetzung in die Anwendung erklĂ€rtes Ziel der DGPA und dieser Tradition folgend wurden BeitrĂ€ge aus vielen Bereichen moderner Neurowissenschaft (Elektrophysiologie, bildgebende Verfahren, Peripherphysiologie, Neuroendokrinologie, Verhaltensgenetik, u.a.) prĂ€sentiert und liegen hier in Kurzform vor

    A biopsychosocial formulation of pain communication

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    We present a detailed framework for understanding the numerous and complicated interactions among psychological and social determinants of pain through examination of the process of pain communication. The focus is on an improved understanding of immediate dyadic transactions during painful events in the context of broader social phenomena. Fine-grain consideration of social transactions during pain leads to an appreciation of sociobehavioral events affecting both suffering persons as well as caregivers. Our examination considers knowledge from a variety of perspectives, including clinical health psychology, social and developmental processes, evolutionary psychology, communication studies, and behavioral neuroscience
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