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ICMI
2004
Springer

Bimodal HCI-related affect recognition

13 years 10 months ago
Bimodal HCI-related affect recognition
Perhaps the most fundamental application of affective computing would be Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) in which the computer is able to detect and track the user’s affective states, and make corresponding feedback. The human multi-sensor affect system defines the expectation of multimodal affect analyzer. In this paper, we present our efforts toward audio-visual HCI-related affect recognition. With HCI applications in mind, we take into account some special affective states which indicate users’ cognitive/motivational states. Facing the fact that a facial expression is influenced by both an affective state and speech content, we apply a smoothing method to extract the information of the affective state from facial features. In our fusion stage, a voting method is applied to combine audio and visual modalities so that the final affect recognition accuracy is greatly improved. We test our bimodal affect recognition approach on 38 subjects with 11 HCI-related affect states. The ex...
Zhihong Zeng, Jilin Tu, Ming Liu, Tong Zhang, Nich
Added 01 Jul 2010
Updated 01 Jul 2010
Type Conference
Year 2004
Where ICMI
Authors Zhihong Zeng, Jilin Tu, Ming Liu, Tong Zhang, Nicholas Rizzolo, ZhenQiu Zhang, Thomas S. Huang, Dan Roth, Stephen E. Levinson
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