Inpatient facial expression recognition with SMS alert


Autoria(s): Chang, C.C.; Lin, C.J.; Tjondronegoro, D.W.
Data(s)

01/07/2013

Resumo

Facial expression recognition (FER) has been dramatically developed in recent years, thanks to the advancements in related fields, especially machine learning, image processing and human recognition. Accordingly, the impact and potential usage of automatic FER have been growing in a wide range of applications, including human-computer interaction, robot control and driver state surveillance. However, to date, robust recognition of facial expressions from images and videos is still a challenging task due to the difficulty in accurately extracting the useful emotional features. These features are often represented in different forms, such as static, dynamic, point-based geometric or region-based appearance. Facial movement features, which include feature position and shape changes, are generally caused by the movements of facial elements and muscles during the course of emotional expression. The facial elements, especially key elements, will constantly change their positions when subjects are expressing emotions. As a consequence, the same feature in different images usually has different positions. In some cases, the shape of the feature may also be distorted due to the subtle facial muscle movements. Therefore, for any feature representing a certain emotion, the geometric-based position and appearance-based shape normally changes from one image to another image in image databases, as well as in videos. This kind of movement features represents a rich pool of both static and dynamic characteristics of expressions, which playa critical role for FER. The vast majority of the past work on FER does not take the dynamics of facial expressions into account. Some efforts have been made on capturing and utilizing facial movement features, and almost all of them are static based. These efforts try to adopt either geometric features of the tracked facial points, or appearance difference between holistic facial regions in consequent frames or texture and motion changes in loca- facial regions. Although achieved promising results, these approaches often require accurate location and tracking of facial points, which remains problematic.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/72086/

Publicador

IEEE

Relação

DOI:10.1109/ICOISS.2013.6678415

Chang, C.C., Lin, C.J., & Tjondronegoro, D.W. (2013) Inpatient facial expression recognition with SMS alert. In Proceedings of International Conference on Optical Imaging Sensor and Security, IEEE, Tamil Nadu, India, pp. 1-10.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 IEEE

Fonte

School of Information Systems; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #Electronic messaging #Emotion recognition #Face recognition #Image texture #Medical image processing
Tipo

Conference Paper