Towards the detection of deception in interactive multimedia environments


Autoria(s): Silva, Hugo Plácido da; Alves, Ana Priscila; Lourenço, André; Fred, Ana; Montalvão, Inês; Alegre, Leonel
Data(s)

12/09/2014

12/09/2014

2013

Resumo

A classical application of biosignal analysis has been the psychophysiological detection of deception, also known as the polygraph test, which is currently a part of standard practices of law enforcement agencies and several other institutions worldwide. Although its validity is far from gathering consensus, the underlying psychophysiological principles are still an interesting add-on for more informal applications. In this paper we present an experimental off-the-person hardware setup, propose a set of feature extraction criteria and provide a comparison of two classification approaches, targeting the detection of deception in the context of a role-playing interactive multimedia environment. Our work is primarily targeted at recreational use in the context of a science exhibition, where the main goal is to present basic concepts related with knowledge discovery, biosignal analysis and psychophysiology in an educational way, using techniques that are simple enough to be understood by children of different ages. Nonetheless, this setting will also allow us to build a significant data corpus, annotated with ground-truth information, and collected with non-intrusive sensors, enabling more advanced research on the topic. Experimental results have shown interesting findings and provided useful guidelines for future work. Pattern Recognition

Identificador

SILVA, Hugo Plácido; ALVES, Ana Priscila; LOURENÇO, André; FRED, Ana; MONTALVÃO, Inês; ALEGRE, Leonel - Towards the Detection of Deception in Interactive Multimedia Environments. Human-Computer Interaction and Knowledge Discovery in Complex, Unstructured, Big Data. Vol. 7947 (2013), p. 65-76.

978-3-642-39145-3

978-3-642-39146-0

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.21/3793

10.1007/978-3-642-39146-0_7

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Springer Berlin Heidelberg

Relação

http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-3-642-39146-0_7

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Deception #Educational Module #Human-Computer Interaction #Biosignals
Tipo

bookPart