Abstract:Micro-expressions (MEs) are brief and involuntary facial expressions that occur when people are trying to hide their true feelings or conceal their emotions. Based on psychology research, MEs play an important role in understanding genuine emotions, which leads to many potential applications. Therefore, ME analysis has been becoming an attractive topic for various research areas, such as psychology, law enforcement, and psychotherapy. In the computer vision field, the study of MEs can be divided into two main tasks: spotting and recognition, which are to identify positions of MEs in videos and determine the emotion category of detected MEs, respectively. Recently, although much research has been done, the construction of a fully automatic system for analyzing MEs is still far away from practice. This is because of two main reasons: most of the research in MEs only focuses on the recognition part while abandons the spotting task; current public datasets for ME spotting are not challenging enough to support developing a robust spotting algorithm. Our contributions in this paper are three folds: (1) We introduce an extension of the SMIC-E database, namely SMIC-E-Long database, which is a new challenging benchmark for ME spotting. (2) We suggest a new evaluation protocol that standardizes the comparison of various ME spotting techniques. (3) Extensive experiments with handcrafted and deep learning-based approaches on the SMIC-E-Long database are performed for baseline evaluation.
Abstract:Micro-expressions are rapid and involuntary facial expressions, which indicate the suppressed or concealed emotions. Recently, the research on automatic micro-expression (ME) spotting obtains increasing attention. ME spotting is a crucial step prior to further ME analysis tasks. The spotting results can be used as important cues to assist many other human-oriented tasks and thus have many potential applications. In this paper, by investigating existing ME spotting methods, we recognize the immediacy of standardizing the performance evaluation of micro-expression spotting methods. To this end, we construct a micro-expression spotting benchmark (MESB). Firstly, we set up a sliding window based multi-scale evaluation framework. Secondly, we introduce a series of protocols. Thirdly, we also provide baseline results of popular methods. The MESB facilitates the research on ME spotting with fairer and more comprehensive evaluation and also enables to leverage the cutting-edge machine learning tools widely.