4.7 Article

Speech Emotion Analysis: Exploring the Role of Context

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages 502-509

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMM.2010.2058095

Keywords

Affect analysis; affective computing; context analysis; emotional speech; emotion intelligence; emotion recognition; vocal expression

Funding

  1. UC Discovery Project

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Automated analysis of human affective behavior has attracted increasing attention in recent years. With the research shift toward spontaneous behavior, many challenges have come to surface ranging from database collection strategies to the use of new feature sets (e. g., lexical cues apart from prosodic features). Use of contextual information, however, is rarely addressed in the field of affect expression recognition, yet it is evident that affect recognition by human is largely influenced by the context information. Our contribution in this paper is threefold. First, we introduce a novel set of features based on cepstrum analysis of pitch and intensity contours. We evaluate the usefulness of these features on two different databases: Berlin Database of emotional speech (EMO-DB) and locally collected audiovisual database in car settings (CVRRCar-AVDB). The overall recognition accuracy achieved for seven emotions in the EMO-DB database is over 84% and over 87% for three emotion classes in CVRRCar-AVDB. This is based on tenfold stratified cross validation. Second, we introduce the collection of a new audiovisual database in an automobile setting (CVRRCar-AVDB). In this current study, we only use the audio channel of the database. Third, we systematically analyze the effects of different contexts on two different databases. We present context analysis of subject and text based on speaker/text-dependent/-independent analysis on EMO-DB. Furthermore, we perform context analysis based on gender information on EMO-DB and CVRRCar-AVDB. The results based on these analyses are promising.

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