{"title":"Automatic tool to annotate smile intensities in conversational face-to-face interactions","authors":"S. Rauzy, Mary Amoyal","doi":"10.1075/gest.22012.rau","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n This study presents an automatic tool that allows to trace smile intensities along a video record of\n conversational face-to-face interactions. The processed output proposes a sequence of adjusted time intervals labeled following\n the Smiling Intensity Scale (Gironzetti, Attardo, and Pickering,\n 2016), a 5 levels scale varying from neutral facial expression to laughing smile. The underlying statistical model of this\n tool is trained on a manually annotated corpus of conversations featuring spontaneous facial expressions. This model will be\n detailed in this study. This tool can be used with benefits for annotating smile in interactions. The results are twofold. First,\n the evaluation reveals an observed agreement of 68% between manual and automatic annotations. Second, manually correcting the\n labels and interval boundaries of the automatic outputs reduces by a factor 10 the annotation time as compared with the time spent\n for manually annotating smile intensities without pretreatment. Our annotation engine makes use of the state-of-the-art toolbox\n OpenFace for tracking the face and for measuring the intensities of the facial Action Units of interest all along the video. The\n documentation and the scripts of our tool, the SMAD software, are available to download at the HMAD open source project URL page\n https://github.com/srauzy/HMAD (last access 31 July 2023).","PeriodicalId":35125,"journal":{"name":"Gesture","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Gesture","FirstCategoryId":"98","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.22012.rau","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study presents an automatic tool that allows to trace smile intensities along a video record of
conversational face-to-face interactions. The processed output proposes a sequence of adjusted time intervals labeled following
the Smiling Intensity Scale (Gironzetti, Attardo, and Pickering,
2016), a 5 levels scale varying from neutral facial expression to laughing smile. The underlying statistical model of this
tool is trained on a manually annotated corpus of conversations featuring spontaneous facial expressions. This model will be
detailed in this study. This tool can be used with benefits for annotating smile in interactions. The results are twofold. First,
the evaluation reveals an observed agreement of 68% between manual and automatic annotations. Second, manually correcting the
labels and interval boundaries of the automatic outputs reduces by a factor 10 the annotation time as compared with the time spent
for manually annotating smile intensities without pretreatment. Our annotation engine makes use of the state-of-the-art toolbox
OpenFace for tracking the face and for measuring the intensities of the facial Action Units of interest all along the video. The
documentation and the scripts of our tool, the SMAD software, are available to download at the HMAD open source project URL page
https://github.com/srauzy/HMAD (last access 31 July 2023).
这项研究提出了一种自动工具,可以根据对话面对面互动的视频记录追踪微笑的强度。处理后的输出提出了一系列调整后的时间间隔,按照微笑强度量表(Gironzetti, Attardo, and Pickering, 2016)标记,这是一个从中性面部表情到大笑微笑的5级量表。该工具的底层统计模型是在具有自发面部表情的手动注释的对话语料库上进行训练的。该模型将在本研究中详细介绍。这个工具可以用于在互动中注释微笑。结果是双重的。首先,评估显示手动注释和自动注释之间的一致性达到68%。其次,与不进行预处理的手动标注微笑强度的时间相比,手动校正自动输出的标签和间隔边界的标注时间减少了10倍。我们的注释引擎使用了最先进的工具箱OpenFace来跟踪面部并测量整个视频中感兴趣的面部动作单元的强度。我们的工具SMAD软件的文档和脚本可以在HMAD开源项目URL页面https://github.com/srauzy/HMAD上下载(最后访问日期为2023年7月31日)。
期刊介绍:
Gesture publishes articles reporting original research, as well as survey and review articles, on all aspects of gesture. The journal aims to stimulate and facilitate scholarly communication between the different disciplines within which work on gesture is conducted. For this reason papers written in the spirit of cooperation between disciplines are especially encouraged. Topics may include, but are by no means limited to: the relationship between gesture and speech; the role gesture may play in communication in all the circumstances of social interaction, including conversations, the work-place or instructional settings; gesture and cognition; the development of gesture in children.