Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features

Micro-facial expressions are fast, subtle movements of facial muscles that occur when someone is attempting to conceal their true emotion. Detecting these movements for a human is di�cult, as the movement could appear and disappear within half of a second. Recently, research into detecting micro-fac...

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Main Author: Davison, Adrian Keith
Published: Manchester Metropolitan University 2016
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Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.694334
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6943342018-04-04T03:28:57ZMicro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal featuresDavison, Adrian Keith2016Micro-facial expressions are fast, subtle movements of facial muscles that occur when someone is attempting to conceal their true emotion. Detecting these movements for a human is di�cult, as the movement could appear and disappear within half of a second. Recently, research into detecting micro-facial movements using computer vision and other techniques has emerged with the aim of outperforming a human. The motivation behind a lot of this research is the potential applications in security, healthcare and emotional-based training. The research has also introduced some ethical concerns on whether it is okay to detect micro-movements when people do not know they are showing them. The main aim of this thesis is to investigate and develop novel ways of detecting micro-facial movements using features based in the spatial and temporal domains. The contributions towards this aim are: an extended feature descriptor to describe micro-facial movement namely Local Binary Patterns on Three Orthogonal Planes (LBP-TOP) combined with Gaussian Derivatives (GD); a dataset of spontaneously induced micro-facial movements, namely Spontaneous Activity of Micro-Movements (SAMM); an individualised baseline method for micromovement detection that forms an Adaptive Baseline Threshold (ABT); Facial Action Coding System (FACS)-based regions are proposed to focus on the local movement of relevant facial areas. The LBP-TOP with GD feature was developed to improve on an established feature and use the GD to enhance the facial features. Using machine learning, the method performs well achieving an accuracy of 92.6%. Next a new dataset, SAMM, was introduced that improved on the limitations of previous sets, including a wider demographic, increased resolution and comprehensively FACS coded. An individualised baseline method was the introduced and tested using the new dataset. Using feature di�erence instead of machine learning, the performance increased with a recall of 0.8429 on the maximum thresholding and a further increase of the recall to 0.9125 when using the ABT. To increase the relevance of what is being processed on the face, FACS-based regions were created. By focusing on local regions and individualised baselines, this method outperformed similar state-of-the-art with an Area Under Curve (AUC) of 0.7513. The research into detecting micro-movements is still in it's infancy, and much more can be done to advance this �eld. While machine learning can �nd patterns in normal facial expressions, it is the feature di�erence methods that perform the best when detecting the subtle changes of the face. By using this and comparing the movement against a person's baseline, the micro-movements can �nally be accurately detected.006.3Manchester Metropolitan Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.694334http://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/617106/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
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topic 006.3
spellingShingle 006.3
Davison, Adrian Keith
Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
description Micro-facial expressions are fast, subtle movements of facial muscles that occur when someone is attempting to conceal their true emotion. Detecting these movements for a human is di�cult, as the movement could appear and disappear within half of a second. Recently, research into detecting micro-facial movements using computer vision and other techniques has emerged with the aim of outperforming a human. The motivation behind a lot of this research is the potential applications in security, healthcare and emotional-based training. The research has also introduced some ethical concerns on whether it is okay to detect micro-movements when people do not know they are showing them. The main aim of this thesis is to investigate and develop novel ways of detecting micro-facial movements using features based in the spatial and temporal domains. The contributions towards this aim are: an extended feature descriptor to describe micro-facial movement namely Local Binary Patterns on Three Orthogonal Planes (LBP-TOP) combined with Gaussian Derivatives (GD); a dataset of spontaneously induced micro-facial movements, namely Spontaneous Activity of Micro-Movements (SAMM); an individualised baseline method for micromovement detection that forms an Adaptive Baseline Threshold (ABT); Facial Action Coding System (FACS)-based regions are proposed to focus on the local movement of relevant facial areas. The LBP-TOP with GD feature was developed to improve on an established feature and use the GD to enhance the facial features. Using machine learning, the method performs well achieving an accuracy of 92.6%. Next a new dataset, SAMM, was introduced that improved on the limitations of previous sets, including a wider demographic, increased resolution and comprehensively FACS coded. An individualised baseline method was the introduced and tested using the new dataset. Using feature di�erence instead of machine learning, the performance increased with a recall of 0.8429 on the maximum thresholding and a further increase of the recall to 0.9125 when using the ABT. To increase the relevance of what is being processed on the face, FACS-based regions were created. By focusing on local regions and individualised baselines, this method outperformed similar state-of-the-art with an Area Under Curve (AUC) of 0.7513. The research into detecting micro-movements is still in it's infancy, and much more can be done to advance this �eld. While machine learning can �nd patterns in normal facial expressions, it is the feature di�erence methods that perform the best when detecting the subtle changes of the face. By using this and comparing the movement against a person's baseline, the micro-movements can �nally be accurately detected.
author Davison, Adrian Keith
author_facet Davison, Adrian Keith
author_sort Davison, Adrian Keith
title Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
title_short Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
title_full Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
title_fullStr Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
title_full_unstemmed Micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
title_sort micro-facial movement detection using spatio-temporal features
publisher Manchester Metropolitan University
publishDate 2016
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.694334
work_keys_str_mv AT davisonadriankeith microfacialmovementdetectionusingspatiotemporalfeatures
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