288 research outputs found

    Multichannel Attention Network for Analyzing Visual Behavior in Public Speaking

    Get PDF
    Public speaking is an important aspect of human communication and interaction. The majority of computational work on public speaking concentrates on analyzing the spoken content, and the verbal behavior of the speakers. While the success of public speaking largely depends on the content of the talk, and the verbal behavior, non-verbal (visual) cues, such as gestures and physical appearance also play a significant role. This paper investigates the importance of visual cues by estimating their contribution towards predicting the popularity of a public lecture. For this purpose, we constructed a large database of more than 18001800 TED talk videos. As a measure of popularity of the TED talks, we leverage the corresponding (online) viewers' ratings from YouTube. Visual cues related to facial and physical appearance, facial expressions, and pose variations are extracted from the video frames using convolutional neural network (CNN) models. Thereafter, an attention-based long short-term memory (LSTM) network is proposed to predict the video popularity from the sequence of visual features. The proposed network achieves state-of-the-art prediction accuracy indicating that visual cues alone contain highly predictive information about the popularity of a talk. Furthermore, our network learns a human-like attention mechanism, which is particularly useful for interpretability, i.e. how attention varies with time, and across different visual cues by indicating their relative importance

    Multimodal Human Group Behavior Analysis

    Get PDF
    Human behaviors in a group setting involve a complex mixture of multiple modalities: audio, visual, linguistic, and human interactions. With the rapid progress of AI, automatic prediction and understanding of these behaviors is no longer a dream. In a negotiation, discovering human relationships and identifying the dominant person can be useful for decision making. In security settings, detecting nervous behaviors can help law enforcement agents spot suspicious people. In adversarial settings such as national elections and court defense, identifying persuasive speakers is a critical task. It is beneficial to build accurate machine learning (ML) models to predict such human group behaviors. There are two elements for successful prediction of group behaviors. The first is to design domain-specific features for each modality. Social and Psychological studies have uncovered various factors including both individual cues and group interactions, which inspire us to extract relevant features computationally. In particular, the group interaction modality plays an important role, since human behaviors influence each other through interactions in a group. Second, effective multimodal ML models are needed to align and integrate the different modalities for accurate predictions. However, most previous work ignored the group interaction modality. Moreover, they only adopt early fusion or late fusion to combine different modalities, which is not optimal. This thesis presents methods to train models taking multimodal inputs in group interaction videos, and to predict human group behaviors. First, we develop an ML algorithm to automatically predict human interactions from videos, which is the basis to extract interaction features and model group behaviors. Second, we propose a multimodal method to identify dominant people in videos from multiple modalities. Third, we study the nervousness in human behavior by a developing hybrid method: group interaction feature engineering combined with individual facial embedding learning. Last, we introduce a multimodal fusion framework that enables us to predict how persuasive speakers are. Overall, we develop one algorithm to extract group interactions and build three multimodal models to identify three kinds of human behavior in videos: dominance, nervousness and persuasion. The experiments demonstrate the efficacy of the methods and analyze the modality-wise contributions
    • …
    corecore