4.7 Article

Action Units and Their Cross-Correlations for Prediction of Cognitive Load during Driving

Journal

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON AFFECTIVE COMPUTING
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 161-175

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TAFFC.2016.2584042

Keywords

Affect sensing and analysis; facial expression; affective computing applications; vehicle operation; emotional corpora; driver cognitive distraction

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Driving requires the constant coordination of many body systems and full attention of the person. Cognitive distraction (subsidiary mental load) of the driver is an important factor that decreases attention and responsiveness, which may result in human error and accidents. In this paper, we present a study of facial expressions of such mental diversion of attention. First, we introduce a multi-camera database of 46 people recorded while driving a simulator in two conditions, baseline and induced cognitive load using a secondary task. Then, we present an automatic system to differentiate between the two conditions, where we use features extracted from Facial Action Unit (AU) values and their cross-correlations in order to exploit recurring synchronization and causality patterns. Both the recording and detection system are suitable for integration in a vehicle and a real-world application, e.g., an early warning system. We show that when the system is trained individually on each subject we achieve a mean accuracy and F-score of similar to 95 percent, and for the subject independent tests similar to 68 percent accuracy and similar to 66 percent F-score, with person-specific normalization to handle subject dependency. Based on the results, we discuss the universality of the facial expressions of such states and possible real-world uses of the system.

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