Publication | Open Access
Deep-learned faces of pain and emotions: Elucidating the differences of facial expressions with the help of explainable AI methods
57
Citations
19
References
2019
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEngineeringMachine LearningExplainable Ai MethodsAffective NeuroscienceAi FoundationDeep Neural MethodsPsychologySocial SciencesEmotional ResponseData ScienceFacial ExpressionsPattern RecognitionAffective ComputingInterpretabilityCognitive ScienceMachine Learning ModelExplainable AiComputer ScienceDeep LearningDeep Neural NetworksFacial Expression RecognitionExplanation-based LearningPain Recognition ToolFacial AnimationModel InterpretabilityExplainable Artificial IntelligenceEmotionEmotion Recognition
Abstract Deep neural networks are successfully used for object and face recognition in images and videos. In order to be able to apply such networks in practice, for example in hospitals as a pain recognition tool, the current procedures are only suitable to a limited extent. The advantage of deep neural methods is that they can learn complex non-linear relationships between raw data and target classes without limiting themselves to a set of hand-crafted features provided by humans. However, the disadvantage is that due to the complexity of these networks, it is not possible to interpret the knowledge that is stored inside the network. It is a black-box learning procedure. Explainable Artificial Intelligence (AI) approaches mitigate this problem by extracting explanations for decisions and representing them in a human-interpretable form. The aim of this paper is to investigate the explainable AI methods Layer-wise Relevance Propagation (LRP) and Local Interpretable Model-agnostic Explanations (LIME). These approaches are applied to explain how a deep neural network distinguishes facial expressions of pain from facial expressions of emotions such as happiness and disgust.
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