15,450 research outputs found
Time-delay neural network for continuous emotional dimension prediction from facial expression sequences
"(c) 2015 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other users, including reprinting/ republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted components of this work in other works."Automatic continuous affective state prediction from naturalistic facial expression is a very challenging research topic but very important in human-computer interaction. One of the main challenges is modeling the dynamics that characterize naturalistic expressions. In this paper, a novel two-stage automatic system is proposed to continuously predict affective dimension values from facial expression videos. In the first stage, traditional regression methods are used to classify each individual video frame, while in the second stage, a Time-Delay Neural Network (TDNN) is proposed to model the temporal relationships between
consecutive predictions. The two-stage approach separates the emotional state dynamics modeling from an individual emotional state prediction step based on input features. In doing so, the temporal information used by the TDNN is not biased by the high variability between features of consecutive frames and allows the network to more easily exploit the slow changing dynamics between emotional states. The system was fully tested and evaluated on three different facial expression video datasets. Our experimental results demonstrate that the use of a two-stage approach combined with the TDNN to take into account previously classified frames significantly improves the overall performance of continuous emotional state estimation in naturalistic
facial expressions. The proposed approach has won the affect recognition sub-challenge of the third international Audio/Visual Emotion Recognition Challenge (AVEC2013)1
Automatic emotional state detection using facial expression dynamic in videos
In this paper, an automatic emotion detection system is built for a computer or machine to detect the emotional state from facial expressions in human computer communication. Firstly, dynamic motion features are extracted from facial expression videos and then advanced machine learning methods for classification and regression are used to predict the emotional states.
The system is evaluated on two publicly available datasets, i.e. GEMEP_FERA and AVEC2013, and satisfied performances are achieved in comparison with the baseline results provided. With this emotional state detection capability, a machine can read the facial expression of its user automatically. This technique can be integrated into applications such as smart robots, interactive games and smart surveillance systems
Affect Recognition in Ads with Application to Computational Advertising
Advertisements (ads) often include strongly emotional content to leave a
lasting impression on the viewer. This work (i) compiles an affective ad
dataset capable of evoking coherent emotions across users, as determined from
the affective opinions of five experts and 14 annotators; (ii) explores the
efficacy of convolutional neural network (CNN) features for encoding emotions,
and observes that CNN features outperform low-level audio-visual emotion
descriptors upon extensive experimentation; and (iii) demonstrates how enhanced
affect prediction facilitates computational advertising, and leads to better
viewing experience while watching an online video stream embedded with ads
based on a study involving 17 users. We model ad emotions based on subjective
human opinions as well as objective multimodal features, and show how
effectively modeling ad emotions can positively impact a real-life application.Comment: Accepted at the ACM International Conference on Multimedia (ACM MM)
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Controllable Image-to-Video Translation: A Case Study on Facial Expression Generation
The recent advances in deep learning have made it possible to generate
photo-realistic images by using neural networks and even to extrapolate video
frames from an input video clip. In this paper, for the sake of both furthering
this exploration and our own interest in a realistic application, we study
image-to-video translation and particularly focus on the videos of facial
expressions. This problem challenges the deep neural networks by another
temporal dimension comparing to the image-to-image translation. Moreover, its
single input image fails most existing video generation methods that rely on
recurrent models. We propose a user-controllable approach so as to generate
video clips of various lengths from a single face image. The lengths and types
of the expressions are controlled by users. To this end, we design a novel
neural network architecture that can incorporate the user input into its skip
connections and propose several improvements to the adversarial training method
for the neural network. Experiments and user studies verify the effectiveness
of our approach. Especially, we would like to highlight that even for the face
images in the wild (downloaded from the Web and the authors' own photos), our
model can generate high-quality facial expression videos of which about 50\%
are labeled as real by Amazon Mechanical Turk workers.Comment: 10 page
LOMo: Latent Ordinal Model for Facial Analysis in Videos
We study the problem of facial analysis in videos. We propose a novel weakly
supervised learning method that models the video event (expression, pain etc.)
as a sequence of automatically mined, discriminative sub-events (eg. onset and
offset phase for smile, brow lower and cheek raise for pain). The proposed
model is inspired by the recent works on Multiple Instance Learning and latent
SVM/HCRF- it extends such frameworks to model the ordinal or temporal aspect in
the videos, approximately. We obtain consistent improvements over relevant
competitive baselines on four challenging and publicly available video based
facial analysis datasets for prediction of expression, clinical pain and intent
in dyadic conversations. In combination with complimentary features, we report
state-of-the-art results on these datasets.Comment: 2016 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
(CVPR
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