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Author |
Fadi Dornaika; Abdelmalik Moujahid; Bogdan Raducanu |
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Title |
Facial expression recognition using tracked facial actions: Classifier performance analysis |
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Journal Article |
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2013 |
Publication |
Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence |
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EAAI |
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26 |
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1 |
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467-477 |
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Visual face tracking; 3D deformable models; Facial actions; Dynamic facial expression recognition; Human–computer interaction |
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In this paper, we address the analysis and recognition of facial expressions in continuous videos. More precisely, we study classifiers performance that exploit head pose independent temporal facial action parameters. These are provided by an appearance-based 3D face tracker that simultaneously provides the 3D head pose and facial actions. The use of such tracker makes the recognition pose- and texture-independent. Two different schemes are studied. The first scheme adopts a dynamic time warping technique for recognizing expressions where training data are given by temporal signatures associated with different universal facial expressions. The second scheme models temporal signatures associated with facial actions with fixed length feature vectors (observations), and uses some machine learning algorithms in order to recognize the displayed expression. Experiments quantified the performance of different schemes. These were carried out on CMU video sequences and home-made video sequences. The results show that the use of dimension reduction techniques on the extracted time series can improve the classification performance. Moreover, these experiments show that the best recognition rate can be above 90%. |
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Elsevier |
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OR; 600.046;MV |
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Admin @ si @ DMR2013 |
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2185 |
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David Sanchez-Mendoza; David Masip; Agata Lapedriza |
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Title |
Emotion recognition from mid-level features |
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Journal Article |
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2015 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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67 |
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Part 1 |
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66–74 |
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Facial expression; Emotion recognition; Action units; Computer vision |
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In this paper we present a study on the use of Action Units as mid-level features for automatically recognizing basic and subtle emotions. We propose a representation model based on mid-level facial muscular movement features. We encode these movements dynamically using the Facial Action Coding System, and propose to use these intermediate features based on Action Units (AUs) to classify emotions. AUs activations are detected fusing a set of spatiotemporal geometric and appearance features. The algorithm is validated in two applications: (i) the recognition of 7 basic emotions using the publicly available Cohn-Kanade database, and (ii) the inference of subtle emotional cues in the Newscast database. In this second scenario, we consider emotions that are perceived cumulatively in longer periods of time. In particular, we Automatically classify whether video shoots from public News TV channels refer to Good or Bad news. To deal with the different video lengths we propose a Histogram of Action Units and compute it using a sliding window strategy on the frame sequences. Our approach achieves accuracies close to human perception. |
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Elsevier B.V. |
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0167-8655 |
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OR;MV |
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Admin @ si @ SML2015 |
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2746 |
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Author |
Fernando Vilariño; Ludmila I. Kuncheva; Petia Radeva |
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Title |
ROC curves and video analysis optimization in intestinal capsule endoscopy |
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2006 |
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Pattern Recognition Letters |
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PRL |
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27 |
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8 |
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875–881 |
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ROC curves; Classification; Classifiers ensemble; Detection of intestinal contractions; Imbalanced classes; Wireless capsule endoscopy |
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Wireless capsule endoscopy involves inspection of hours of video material by a highly qualified professional. Time episodes corresponding to intestinal contractions, which are of interest to the physician constitute about 1% of the video. The problem is to label automatically time episodes containing contractions so that only a fraction of the video needs inspection. As the classes of contraction and non-contraction images in the video are largely imbalanced, ROC curves are used to optimize the trade-off between false positive and false negative rates. Classifier ensemble methods and simple classifiers were examined. Our results reinforce the claims from recent literature that classifier ensemble methods specifically designed for imbalanced problems have substantial advantages over simple classifiers and standard classifier ensembles. By using ROC curves with the bagging ensemble method the inspection time can be drastically reduced at the expense of a small fraction of missed contractions. |
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800 |
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MILAB;MV;SIAI |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ VKR2006; IAM @ iam @ VKR2006 |
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647 |
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Author |
Agata Lapedriza; David Masip; Jordi Vitria |
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Title |
On the Use of External Face Features for Identity Verification |
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2006 |
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Journal of Multimedia, 1(4): 11–20 |
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1 |
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4 |
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11-20 |
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Face Verification, Computer Vision, Machine Learning |
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In general automatic face classification applications images are captured in natural environments. In these cases, the performance is affected by variations in facial images related to illumination, pose, occlusion or expressions. Most of the existing face classification systems use only the internal features information, composed by eyes, nose and mouth, since they are more difficult to imitate. Nevertheless, nowadays a lot of applications not related to security are developed, and in these cases the information located at head, chin or ears zones (external features) can be useful to improve the current accuracies. However, the lack of a natural alignment in these areas makes difficult to extract these features applying classic Bottom-Up methods. In this paper, we propose a complete scheme based on a Top-Down reconstruction algorithm to extract external features of face images. To test our system we have performed face verification experiments using public databases, given that identity verification is a general task that has many real life applications. We have considered images uniformly illuminated, images with occlusions and images with high local changes in the illumination, and the obtained results show that the information contributed by the external features can be useful for verification purposes, specially significant when faces are partially occluded. |
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OR;MV |
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BCNPCL @ bcnpcl @ LMV2006b |
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708 |
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Author |
Cesar Isaza; Joaquin Salas; Bogdan Raducanu |
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Title |
Evaluation of Intrinsic Image Algorithms to Detect the Shadows Cast by Static Objects Outdoors |
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Journal Article |
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Year |
2012 |
Publication |
Sensors |
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SENS |
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12 |
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10 |
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13333-13348 |
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In some automatic scene analysis applications, the presence of shadows becomes a nuisance that is necessary to deal with. As a consequence, a preliminary stage in many computer vision algorithms is to attenuate their effect. In this paper, we focus our attention on the detection of shadows cast by static objects outdoors, as the scene is viewed for extended periods of time (days, weeks) from a fixed camera and considering daylight intervals where the main source of light is the sun. In this context, we report two contributions. First, we introduce the use of synthetic images for which ground truth can be generated automatically, avoiding the tedious effort of manual annotation. Secondly, we report a novel application of the intrinsic image concept to the automatic detection of shadows cast by static objects in outdoors. We make both a quantitative and a qualitative evaluation of several algorithms based on this image representation. For the quantitative evaluation, we used the synthetic data set, while for the qualitative evaluation we used both data sets. Our experimental results show that the evaluated methods can partially solve the problem of shadow detection. |
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OR;MV |
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Admin @ si @ ISR2012b |
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2173 |
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