With the development of sensor technology and learning algorithms, multimodal emotion recognition has attracted widespread attention. Many existing studies on emotion recognition mainly focused on normal people. Besides, due to hearing loss, deaf people cannot express emotions by words, which may have a greater need for emotion recognition. In this paper, the deep belief network (DBN) was utilized to classify three category emotions through the electroencephalograph (EEG) and facial expressions. Signals from 15 deaf subjects were recorded when they watched the emotional movie clips. Our system uses a 1-s window without overlap to segment the EEG signals in five frequency bands, then the differential entropy (DE) feature is extracted. The DE feature of EEG and facial expression images plays as multimodal input for subject-dependent emotion recognition. To avoid feature redundancy, the top 12 major EEG electrode channels (FP2, FP1, FT7, FPZ, F7, T8, F8, CB2, CB1, FT8, T7, TP8) in the gamma band and 30 facial expression features (the areas around the eyes and eyebrow) which are selected by the largest weight values. The results show that the classification accuracy is 99.92% by feature selection in deaf emotion reignition. Moreover, investigations on brain activities reveal deaf brain activity changes mainly in the beta and gamma bands, and the brain regions that are affected by emotions are mainly distributed in the prefrontal and outer temporal lobes.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JBHI.2021.3092412 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!