DocumentCode
1312822
Title
Advances in Behavioral Science Using Automated Facial Image Analysis and Synthesis [Social Sciences]
Author
Cohn, Jeffrey F.
Author_Institution
A professor of psychology at the University of Pittsburgh and adjunct faculty at the Robotics Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.
Volume
27
Issue
6
fYear
2010
Firstpage
128
Lastpage
133
Abstract
The face conveys information about a person´s age, sex, background, and identity; what they are feeling, thinking, or likely to do next. Facial expression regulates face-to-face interactions, indicates reciprocity and interpersonal attraction or repulsion, and enables intersubjectivity between members of different cultures. Facial expression indexes neurological and psychiatric functioning and reveals personality and socioemotional development. Not surprisingly, the face has been of keen interest to behavioral scientists. About 15 years ago, computer scientists became increasingly interested in the use of computer vision and graphics to automatically analyze and synthesize facial expression. This effort was made possible in part by the development in psychology of detailed coding systems for describing facial actions and their relation to basic emotions, that is, emotions that are interpreted similarly in diverse cultures. The most detailed of these systems, the Facial Action Coding System (FACS), informed the development of the MPEG-4 facial animation parameters for video transmission and enabled progress toward automated measurement and synthesis of facial actions for research in affective computing, social signal processing, and behavioral science. This article reports key advances in behavioral science that are becoming possible through these developments. Before beginning, automated facial image analysis and synthesis (AFAS) is briefly described.
Keywords
computer vision; emotion recognition; face recognition; image coding; psychology; MPEG-4 facial animation parameter; automated facial image analysis and synthesis; behavioral science; computer vision; face-to-face interaction; facial action coding system; facial expression; graphics; interpersonal attraction; interpersonal repulsion; neurological functioning; personal background; personal identity; personality; psychiatric functioning; psychology; sex; social signal processing; socioemotional development; video transmission; Behavioral science; Databases; Facial animation; Facial features;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Signal Processing Magazine, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1053-5888
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSP.2010.938102
Filename
5563099
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