Publication | Closed Access
Recognizing Emotions From an Ensemble of Features
35
Citations
27
References
2012
Year
EngineeringMachine LearningBiometricsAffective NeuroscienceMultimodal Sentiment AnalysisSocial SciencesFace DetectionFacial Recognition SystemImage AnalysisData SciencePattern RecognitionAffective ComputingCognitive ScienceMachine VisionDeep LearningComputer VisionFacial Expression RecognitionFacial AnimationEmotion Recognition PerformanceEmotionEmotion Recognition
This paper details the authors' efforts to push the baseline of emotion recognition performance on the Geneva Multimodal Emotion Portrayals (GEMEP) Facial Expression Recognition and Analysis database. Both subject-dependent and subject-independent emotion recognition scenarios are addressed in this paper. The approach toward solving this problem involves face detection, followed by key-point identification, then feature generation, and then, finally, classification. An ensemble of features consisting of hierarchical Gaussianization, scale-invariant feature transform, and some coarse motion features have been used. In the classification stage, we used support vector machines. The classification task has been divided into person-specific and person-independent emotion recognitions using face recognition with either manual labels or automatic algorithms. We achieve 100% performance for the person-specific one, 66% performance for the person-independent one, and 80% performance for overall results, in terms of classification rate, for emotion recognition with manual identification of subjects.
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