Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.

Physiological signals may be used as objective markers to identify emotions, which play relevant roles in social and daily life. To measure these signals, the use of contact-free techniques, such as Infrared Thermal Imaging (IRTI), is indispensable to individuals who have sensory sensitivity. The go...

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Main Authors: Christiane Goulart, Carlos Valadão, Denis Delisle-Rodriguez, Eliete Caldeira, Teodiano Bastos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212928
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spelling doaj-0dd7df0a1ebe419caa6f014cf289bbb82021-03-03T20:48:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01143e021292810.1371/journal.pone.0212928Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.Christiane GoulartCarlos ValadãoDenis Delisle-RodriguezEliete CaldeiraTeodiano BastosPhysiological signals may be used as objective markers to identify emotions, which play relevant roles in social and daily life. To measure these signals, the use of contact-free techniques, such as Infrared Thermal Imaging (IRTI), is indispensable to individuals who have sensory sensitivity. The goal of this study is to propose an experimental design to analyze five emotions (disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and surprise) from facial thermal images of typically developing (TD) children aged 7-11 years using emissivity variation, as recorded by IRTI. For the emotion analysis, a dataset considered emotional dimensions (valence and arousal), facial bilateral sides and emotion classification accuracy. The results evidence the efficiency of the experimental design with interesting findings, such as the correlation between the valence and the thermal decrement in nose; disgust and happiness as potent triggers of facial emissivity variations; and significant emissivity variations in nose, cheeks and periorbital regions associated with different emotions. Moreover, facial thermal asymmetry was revealed with a distinct thermal tendency in the cheeks, and classification accuracy reached a mean value greater than 85%. From the results, the emissivity variations were an efficient marker to analyze emotions in facial thermal images, and IRTI was confirmed to be an outstanding technique to study emotions. This study contributes a robust dataset to analyze the emotions of 7-11-year-old TD children, an age range for which there is a gap in the literature.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212928
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christiane Goulart
Carlos Valadão
Denis Delisle-Rodriguez
Eliete Caldeira
Teodiano Bastos
spellingShingle Christiane Goulart
Carlos Valadão
Denis Delisle-Rodriguez
Eliete Caldeira
Teodiano Bastos
Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Christiane Goulart
Carlos Valadão
Denis Delisle-Rodriguez
Eliete Caldeira
Teodiano Bastos
author_sort Christiane Goulart
title Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
title_short Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
title_full Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
title_fullStr Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
title_full_unstemmed Emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
title_sort emotion analysis in children through facial emissivity of infrared thermal imaging.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Physiological signals may be used as objective markers to identify emotions, which play relevant roles in social and daily life. To measure these signals, the use of contact-free techniques, such as Infrared Thermal Imaging (IRTI), is indispensable to individuals who have sensory sensitivity. The goal of this study is to propose an experimental design to analyze five emotions (disgust, fear, happiness, sadness and surprise) from facial thermal images of typically developing (TD) children aged 7-11 years using emissivity variation, as recorded by IRTI. For the emotion analysis, a dataset considered emotional dimensions (valence and arousal), facial bilateral sides and emotion classification accuracy. The results evidence the efficiency of the experimental design with interesting findings, such as the correlation between the valence and the thermal decrement in nose; disgust and happiness as potent triggers of facial emissivity variations; and significant emissivity variations in nose, cheeks and periorbital regions associated with different emotions. Moreover, facial thermal asymmetry was revealed with a distinct thermal tendency in the cheeks, and classification accuracy reached a mean value greater than 85%. From the results, the emissivity variations were an efficient marker to analyze emotions in facial thermal images, and IRTI was confirmed to be an outstanding technique to study emotions. This study contributes a robust dataset to analyze the emotions of 7-11-year-old TD children, an age range for which there is a gap in the literature.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0212928
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