4.7 Article

Dynamic Difficulty Awareness Training for Continuous Emotion Prediction

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MULTIMEDIA
Volume 21, Issue 5, Pages 1289-1301

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TMM.2018.2871949

Keywords

Emotion prediction; difficulty awareness learning; dynamic learning

Funding

  1. UK's Economic and Social Research Council [HJ-253479]
  2. European Union [645094, 645378]
  3. TransAtlantic Platform Digging into Data collaboration Grant (ACLEW: Analysing Child Language Experiences Around TheWorld)
  4. ESRC [ES/R00398X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Time-continuous emotion prediction has become an increasingly compelling task in machine learning. Considerable efforts have been made to advance the performance of these systems. Nonetheless, the main focus has been the development of more sophisticated models and the incorporation of different expressive modalities (e.g., speech, face, and physiology). In this paper, motivated by the benefit of difficulty awareness in a human learning procedure, we propose a novel machine learning framework, namely, dynamic difficulty awareness training (DDAT), which sheds fresh light on the research-directly exploiting the difficulties in learning to boost the machine learning process. The DDAT framework consists of two stages: information retrieval and information exploitation. In the first stage, we make use of the reconstruction error of input features or the annotation uncertainty to estimate the difficulty of learning specific information. The obtained difficulty level is then used in tandem with original features to update the model input in a second learning stage with the expectation that the model can learn to focus on high difficulty regions of the learning process. We perform extensive experiments on a benchmark database REmote COLlaborative and affective to evaluate the effectiveness of the proposed framework. The experimental results show that our approach outperforms related baselines as well as other well-established time-continuous emotion prediction systems, which suggests that dynamically integrating the difficulty information for neural networks can help enhance the learning process.

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