3 research outputs found

    Neural Conditional Ordinal Random Fields for Agreement Level Estimation

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    Neural Conditional Ordinal Random Fields for Agreement Level Estimation

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    We present a novel approach to automated estimation of agreement intensity levels from facial images. To this end, we employ the MAHNOB Mimicry database of subjects recorded during dyadic interactions, where the facial images are annotated in terms of agreement intensity levels using the Likert scale (strong disagreement, disagreement, neutral, agreement and strong agreement). Dynamic modelling of the agreement levels is accomplished by means of a Conditional Ordinal Random Field model. Specifically, we propose a novel Neural Conditional Ordinal Random Field model that performs non-linear feature extraction from face images using the notion of Neural Networks, while also modelling temporal and ordinal relationships between the agreement levels. We show in our experiments that the proposed approach outperforms existing methods for modelling of sequential data. The preliminary results obtained on five subjects demonstrate that the intensity of agreement can successfully be estimated from facial images (39% F1 score) using the proposed method

    Neural conditional ordinal random fields for agreement level estimation

    Get PDF
    We present a novel approach to automated estimation of agreement intensity levels from facial images. To this end, we employ the MAHNOB Mimicry database of subjects recorded during dyadic interactions, where the facial images are annotated in terms of agreement intensity levels using the Likert scale (strong disagreement, disagreement, neutral, agreement and strong agreement). Dynamic modelling of the agreement levels is accomplished by means of a Conditional Ordinal Random Field model. Specifically, we propose a novel Neural Conditional Ordinal Random Field model that performs non-linear feature extraction from face images using the notion of Neural Networks, while also modelling temporal and ordinal relationships between the agreement levels. We show in our experiments that the proposed approach outperforms existing methods for modelling of sequential data. The preliminary results obtained on five subjects demonstrate that the intensity of agreement can successfully be estimated from facial images (39% F1 score) using the proposed method
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