| Literature DB >> 25478003 |
Peng Wu1, Isabel Gonzalez1, Georgios Patsis1, Dongmei Jiang2, Hichem Sahli1, Eric Kerckhofs3, Marie Vandekerckhove4.
Abstract
Patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) can exhibit a reduction of spontaneous facial expression, designated as "facial masking," a symptom in which facial muscles become rigid. To improve clinical assessment of facial expressivity of PD, this work attempts to quantify the dynamic facial expressivity (facial activity) of PD by automatically recognizing facial action units (AUs) and estimating their intensity. Spontaneous facial expressivity was assessed by comparing 7 PD patients with 8 control participants. To voluntarily produce spontaneous facial expressions that resemble those typically triggered by emotions, six emotions (amusement, sadness, anger, disgust, surprise, and fear) were elicited using movie clips. During the movie clips, physiological signals (facial electromyography (EMG) and electrocardiogram (ECG)) and frontal face video of the participants were recorded. The participants were asked to report on their emotional states throughout the experiment. We first examined the effectiveness of the emotion manipulation by evaluating the participant's self-reports. Disgust-induced emotions were significantly higher than the other emotions. Thus we focused on the analysis of the recorded data during watching disgust movie clips. The proposed facial expressivity assessment approach captured differences in facial expressivity between PD patients and controls. Also differences between PD patients with different progression of Parkinson's disease have been observed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25478003 PMCID: PMC4247960 DOI: 10.1155/2014/427826
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Math Methods Med ISSN: 1748-670X Impact factor: 2.238
The selected movie clips listed with their sources.
| Emotion | Excerpt's source | |
|---|---|---|
| #1 | #2 | |
| Amusement | Benny and Joone | The god father |
| Sadness | An officer and a gentleman | Up |
| Surprise | Capricorn one | Sea of love |
| Anger | Witness | Gandhi |
| Disgust | Pink flamingos | Trainspotting |
| Fear | Silence of the lambs | The shining |
| Neutral | Colour bar patterns | Hannah and her sisters |
Figure 1Emotion elicitation protocol (SR indicates self-report).
Figure 2Experimental setup.
Figure 3Locations of the EMG electrodes.
FACS AUs and related muscles.
| AU | FACS name | Facial muscle | Videotape | EMG |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AU1 | Inner brow raiser | Frontalis (pars medialis) | X | — |
| AU2 | Outer brow raiser | Frontalis (pars lateralis) | X | — |
| AU4 | Brow lowerer | Depressor glabellae, depressor supercilii, and CS | X | — |
| AU6 | Cheek raiser | OO (pars orbitalis) | X | X |
| AU7 | Lid tightener | OO (pars palpebralis) | X | X |
| AU9 | Nose wrinkler | LLSAN | X | — |
| AU10 | Upper lip raiser | LLS, caput infraorbitalis | — | X |
| AU12 | Lip corner puller | Zygomaticus Major | X | — |
| AU20 | Lip stretcher | Risorius | X | — |
| AU23 | Lip tightener | Orbicularis Oris | X | — |
| AU25 | Lips part | Depressor labii inferioris | X | — |
| AU27 | Mouth stretch | Pterygoids, digastric | X | — |
| AU45 | Blink | Contraction OO | — | X |
| AU46 | Wink | OO | — | X |
Figure 4Example of physiological signal (ECG) denoising using the method proposed in [8].
Figure 5Change points detection.
Figure 6The AU recognition system.
Facial expressivity items defined in ICRP-IEB [9] and used AUs.
| Item | Gestalt degree | Related AUs |
|---|---|---|
| (1) Active expressivity in face | Intensity | 11 AUs |
| (2) Eyebrows raising | Intensity + frequency | AU1 and AU2 |
| (3) Eyebrows pulling together | Intensity + frequency | AU4 |
| (4) Blinking | Frequency | AU45 |
| (5) Cheek raising | Intensity + frequency | AU6 |
| (6) Lip corner puller | Intensity + frequency | AU12 |
Figure 7Example of AU intensity.
Statistical summary of physiological measures.
| Variable | Stimuli | Control | PD | Sig. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Mean | SD | |||
| LLS | Neutral#2 | 1.04 | .34 | 1.16 | .43 | .71 |
| Disgust#1 | 3.36 | 2.04 | 2.27 | 1.77 | .26 | |
| Disgust#2 | 8.04 | 6.49 | 2.71 | 2.25 | .04* | |
|
| ||||||
| OO | Neutral#2 | 1.35 | 1.11 | .94 | .54 | .81 |
| Disgust#1 | 2.82 | 1.77 | 1.81 | 1.28 | .32 | |
| Disgust#2 | 5.20 | 5.71 | 2.07 | 1.48 | .13 | |
|
| ||||||
| HR | Neutral#2 | 1.72 | 2.77 | 2.76 | — | — |
| Disgust#1 | −.53 | 2.64 | 5.12 | — | — | |
| Disgust#2 | 2.22 | 5.53 | 5.65 | — | — | |
|
| ||||||
| HRV | Neutral#2 | 1.53 | 12.96 | −7.65 | — | — |
| Disgust#1 | 8.01 | 11.45 | 26.34 | — | — | |
| Disgust#2 | 14.86 | 35.64 | 14.92 | — | — | |
*The two groups are significantly different; that is, P < .05.
“—” We did not compare the cardiac responses (i.e., HR and HRV) between groups, because due to technical failures we lost the ECG data for 10 participants and thus only 5 participants (4 controls and 1 PD) completed the ECG recording.
Facial expressivity assessment based on different methods.
| Var. | C* | LP* | IP* | MP* | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| TFA | 8 | 8 | 4 | 5 | 5 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 4 | 4 | — | 5 |
| AMC◊ | 13.9 | 27.7 | 10.8 | 6.7 | 6.5 | 4.3 | 8.2 | 6.2 | 6.9 | 3.9 | — | 8.2 |
| AI | 5.4 | 5.1 | 1.8 | 2.8 | 2.8 | 2.2 | 3.8 | 3.9 | 3.1 | 2.2 | — | 3.3 |
| FE◊ | 72.2 | 75.1 | 24.6 | 20.9 | 18.7 | 14.2 | 44.4 | 35.6 | 26.2 | 13.5 | — | 32.2 |
* D#1, D#2, N#2, C, LP, IP, and MP denote disgust#1, disgust#2, neutral#2, the control, the least, intermediate, and most severely form of Parkinson's patients, respectively.
◊presented in percentages.
“—” The face of the MP while watching D#2 was blocked by his hand.
Figure 8The facial activities while watching disgust#1.
Figure 9The facial activities while watching neutral#2.
Figure 10The quantified facial expressivity.
Figure 11The quantified facial expressivity based on the improved function.