• DocumentCode
    1874439
  • Title

    Auditory mood detection for social and educational robots

  • Author

    Ruvolo, Paul ; Fasel, Ian ; Movellan, Javier

  • Author_Institution
    Univ. of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA
  • fYear
    2008
  • fDate
    19-23 May 2008
  • Firstpage
    3551
  • Lastpage
    3556
  • Abstract
    Social robots face the fundamental challenge of detecting and adapting their behavior to the current social mood. For example, robots that assist teachers in early education must choose different behaviors depending on whether the children are crying, laughing, sleeping, or singing songs. Interactive robotic applications require perceptual algorithms that both run in real time and are adaptable to the challenging conditions of daily life. This paper explores a novel approach to auditory mood detection which was born out of our experience immersing social robots in classroom environments. We propose a new set of low-level spectral contrast features that extends a class of features which have proven very successful for object recognition in the modern computer vision literature. Features are selected and combined using machine learning approaches so as to make decisions about the ongoing auditory mood. We demonstrate excellent performance on two standard emotional speech databases (the Berlin Emotional Speech [W. Burkhardt et al., 2005], and the ORATOR dataset [H. Quast, 2001]). In addition we establish strong baseline performance for mood detection on a database collected from a social robot immersed in a classroom of 18-24 months old children [J. Movellan er al., 2007]. This approach operates in real time at little computational cost. It has the potential to greatly enhance the effectiveness of social robots in daily life environments.
  • Keywords
    hearing; learning (artificial intelligence); robots; auditory mood detection; educational robot; emotional speech database; interactive robotic application; machine learning; object recognition; social mood; social robot; Computer vision; Educational robots; Emotion recognition; Face detection; Mood; Object recognition; Prototypes; Robotics and automation; Speech; USA Councils;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Robotics and Automation, 2008. ICRA 2008. IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Pasadena, CA
  • ISSN
    1050-4729
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1646-2
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1050-4729
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ROBOT.2008.4543754
  • Filename
    4543754