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Prediction-Based Audiovisual Fusion for Classification of Non-Linguistic Vocalisations
Author(s) -
Stavros Petridis,
Maja Pantic
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ieee transactions on affective computing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.309
H-Index - 67
ISSN - 1949-3045
DOI - 10.1109/taffc.2015.2446462
Subject(s) - computing and processing , robotics and control systems , signal processing and analysis
Prediction plays a key role in recent computational models of the brain and it has been suggested that the brain constantly makes multisensory spatiotemporal predictions. Inspired by these findings we tackle the problem of audiovisual fusion from a new perspective based on prediction. We train predictive models which model the spatiotemporal relationship between audio and visual features by learning the audio-to-visual and visual-to-audio feature mapping for each class. Similarly, we train predictive models which model the time evolution of audio and visual features by learning the past-to-future feature mapping for each class. In classification, all the class-specific regression models produce a prediction of the expected audio/visual features and their prediction errors are combined for each class. The set of class-specific regressors which best describes the audiovisual feature relationship, i.e., results in the lowest prediction error, is chosen to label the input frame. We perform cross-database experiments, using the AMI, SAL, and MAHNOB databases, in order to classify laughter and speech and subject-independent experiments on the AVIC database in order to classify laughter, hesitation and consent. In virtually all cases prediction-based audiovisual fusion consistently outperforms the two most commonly used fusion approaches, decision-level and feature-level fusion.

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