|
Device Warns If You're Boring Or Irritating
A device that can pick up on people's emotions is being developed
to help people with autism relate to those around them. It will
alert its autistic user if the person they are talking to starts
showing signs of getting bored or annoyed.
One of the problems facing people with autism is an inability
to pick up on social cues. Failure to notice that they are boring
or confusing their listeners can be particularly damaging, says
Rana El Kaliouby of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. "It's sad because people then avoid having conversations
with them."
The "emotional social intelligence prosthetic" device, which
El Kaliouby is constructing along with MIT colleagues Rosalind
Picard and Alea Teeters, consists of a camera small enough to
be pinned to the side of a pair of glasses, connected to a hand-held
computer running image recognition software plus software that
can read the emotions these images show. If the wearer seems to
be failing to engage his or her listener, the software makes the
hand-held computer vibrate.
In 2004 El Kaliouby demonstrated that her software, developed
with Peter Robinson at the University of Cambridge, could detect
whether someone is agreeing, disagreeing, concentrating, thinking,
unsure or interested, just from a few seconds of video footage.
Previous computer programs have only detected the six more basic
emotional states of happiness, sadness, anger, fear, surprise
and disgust. El Kaliouby's complex states are more useful because
they come up more frequently in conversation, but are also harder
to detect, because they are conveyed in a sequence of movements
rather than a single expression.
Her program is based on a machine-learning algorithm that she
trained by showing it more than 100 8-second video clips of actors
expressing particular emotions. The software picks out movements
of the eyebrows, lips and nose, and tracks head movements such
as tilting, nodding and shaking, which it then associates with
the emotion the actor was showing. When presented with fresh video
clips, the software gets people's emotions right 90 per cent of
the time when the clips are of actors, and 64 per cent of the
time on footage of ordinary people.
El Kaliouby is now training the software on excerpts from movies
and footage captured by webcams. This week she plans to gather
the first on-the-move training footage by equipping a group of
volunteers, some of whom are autistic, with wearable cameras.
Getting the software to work is only the first step, Picard warns.
In its existing form it makes heavy demands on computing power,
so it may need to be pared down to work on a standard hand-held
computer. Other challenges include finding a high-resolution digital
camera that can be worn comfortably, and training people with
autism to look at the faces of those they are conversing with
so that the camera picks up their expressions.
The team will present the device next week at the Body Sensor
Network conference at MIT. People with autism are not the only
ones who stand to benefit. Timothy Bickmore of Northeastern University
in Boston, who studies ways in which computers can be made to
engage with people's emotions, says the device would be a great
teaching aid. "I would love it if you could have a computer looking
at each student in the room to tell me when 20 per cent of them
were bored or confused."
From issue 2545 of New
Scientist magazine, 29 March 2006, page 30
|