| Literature DB >> 28765637 |
Fenglei Yang1, Sijung Hu2, Baomin Li3, Vincent M Dwyer4, Harnani Hassan4, Dong-Qing Wei5, Ping Shi6.
Abstract
Recent progress in Affective Computing (AC) has enabled integration of physiological cues and spontaneous expressions to reveal a subject's emotional state. Due to the lack of an effective technique for evaluating multimodal correlations, experience and intuition play a main role in present AC studies when fusing affective cues or modalities, resulting in unexpected outcomes. This study seeks to demonstrate a dynamic correlation between two such affective cues, physiological changes and spontaneous expressions, which were obtained by a combination of stereo vision based tracking and imaging photoplethysmography (iPPG), with a designed protocol involving 20 healthy subjects. The two cues obtained were sampled into a Statistical Association Space (SAS) to evaluate their dynamic correlation. It is found that the probability densities in the SAS increase as the peaks in two cues are approached. Also the complex form of the high probability density region in the SAS suggests a nonlinear correlation between two cues. Finally the cumulative distribution on the zero time-difference surface is found to be small (<0.047) demonstrating a lack of simultaneity. These results show that the two cues have a close interrelation, that is both asynchronous and nonlinear, in which a peak of one cue heralds a peak in the other.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28765637 PMCID: PMC5539103 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07122-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379