Title :
Modeling Dominance in Group Conversations Using Nonverbal Activity Cues
Author :
Jayagopi, Dinesh Babu ; Hung, Hayley ; Yeo, Chuohao ; Gatica-Perez, Daniel
Author_Institution :
IDIAP Res. Inst., Martigny
fDate :
3/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Dominance - a behavioral expression of power - is a fundamental mechanism of social interaction, expressed and perceived in conversations through spoken words and audiovisual nonverbal cues. The automatic modeling of dominance patterns from sensor data represents a relevant problem in social computing. In this paper, we present a systematic study on dominance modeling in group meetings from fully automatic nonverbal activity cues, in a multi-camera, multi-microphone setting. We investigate efficient audio and visual activity cues for the characterization of dominant behavior, analyzing single and joint modalities. Unsupervised and supervised approaches for dominance modeling are also investigated. Activity cues and models are objectively evaluated on a set of dominance-related classification tasks, derived from an analysis of the variability of human judgment of perceived dominance in group discussions. Our investigation highlights the power of relatively simple yet efficient approaches and the challenges of audiovisual integration. This constitutes the most detailed study on automatic dominance modeling in meetings to date.
Keywords :
data compression; feature extraction; image motion analysis; natural language processing; pattern classification; social sciences computing; speech processing; speech recognition; support vector machines; audiovisual integration; dominance; group conversations; nonverbal activity cues; sensor data; social computing; social interaction; Computer science; Context; Data mining; Humans; Information management; Pattern analysis; Power system modeling; Psychology; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Social network services; Audiovisual activity cues; dominance modeling; group meetings; nonverbal communication;
Journal_Title :
Audio, Speech, and Language Processing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASL.2008.2008238