1. Introduction
Micro-expressions are the facial muscle movements that people involuntarily reveal when they try to hide their true emotions, and are inherited by human beings through a long period of evolutionary inheritance. Due to the hidden nature of micro-expressions and the tendency to confuse them with macro-expressions, micro-expressions went unnoticed until 1966, when Haggard and Isaacs [1] first discovered their existence. Subsequently, in 1969, Ekman and Friesen [2] analyzed a video interview with a depressed patient, Mary, and found that the patient was generally optimistic when asked by the doctor, but when the doctor asked Mary about her future life plans, a painful expression appeared on Mary's face that lasted for only two frames of about 1/12th of a second. Short expressions are defined as micro-expressions. As a true expression of a person's internal emotions, micro-expressions can reveal a person's true emotions and have such characteristics as short duration, low intensity, and difficult to induce [3], making them one of the most reliable physiological characteristics in the fields of psychology and emotion analysis. However, micro-expression recognition remains extremely difficult for trained individuals. Likewise, in the computer field, the current research methods in micro-expression recognition are mainly concentrated in the traditional machine learning field, and the recognition rate of the existing methods is still quite a long way from the macro expression recognition, so they cannot reach the practical application requirements, so it is a very challenging and extraordinary task to research the micro-expression algorithm to improve its recognition accuracy.
Current research work mostly uses micro-expression video sequences for recognition. This operation is not only computationally complex and requires long computational processing time, but it is also difficult to obtain complete micro-expression video sequences for classification in practical application scenarios, which has certain limitations. In response to this problem, we propose a new approach. The main work of this study is as follows:
1) Selection of the onset frame and the apex frame from micro-expression sequence and applying TV-L1 optical flow techniques to extract the facial muscle movement features form them.
2) Proposal of an improved MobileNetV2 [4] that uses SVM as the classifier to improve micro-expression recognition.
3) Comprehensive evaluation of the proposed method [5] is performed on CASME II database to validate its effectiveness and generalizability.
2. Related Work
Micro-expression recognition algorithms are mainly divided into five categories: feature description algorithms, feature transformation algorithms, frequency domain algorithms, optical flow algorithms, and deep learning algorithms.
The feature description algorithm achieves the feature representation of micro-expressions by describing the facial muscle movement characteristics and texture characteristics of the micro-expressions, and reduces the influence of noise, illumination and other factors on the basis of local binary pattern (LBP) to improve the accuracy of feature description. Zhao et al. [6] proposed a local binary mode (LBP-TOP) of three orthogonal planes, extracting LBP features from the video XY plane, XT plane, and YT plane respectively, and stitching them together to obtain the final feature expression. Wang et al. [7] proposed the Local binary pattern with six intersection points (LBP-SIP), which uses the unique different points on the three intersection lines on three orthogonal planes to calculate the space-time pattern, which improves the efficiency of feature extraction by reducing the dimension of features to, and its processing speed is 2.8 times that of LBP-TOP.
The feature transformation algorithm treats the micro-expression sequence as a tensor and performs matrix transformation to remove redundant information and add information such as color, space and time. Wang et al. [8] proposed tensor independent color space (Tensor independent color space, TICS). Since the three channel components of an RGB-encoded image are highly correlated, the features extracted from it may not bring the improvement effect. In another work [9], two color spaces, CIELab and CIELuv, were tried to improve the effect of recognition.
The frequency domain algorithm treats the micro-expression sequence as a time domain signal and converts it to the frequency domain by Fourier transform, Gabor transform, etc. to extract features such as amplitude and phase information, which can effectively extract local features such as corner points and edge information of facial contours, mainly by Riesz wavelet [10] and Gabor transform [11][12].
The optical flow algorithm mainly analyzes the changes of micro-expression sequences in the optical flow field, extracts the relative motion of two adjacent frames of pixels from the pixel's perspective, captures the subtle changes of the face, and reduces the effects of head motion and light changes on the features. Xu et al. [13] proposed a facial dynamics map (FDM) to calculate the dense optical flow field, which effectively removes the errors caused by facial translation, but its bottleneck is that the computational volume is too large and the number of feature dimensions is high. Liu et al. [14] proposed the Main directional mean optical flow feature (MDMO) to locate the key points of the face using the DRMF model [15], and to segment the face into 36 non-overlapping action unit-based regions of interest when extracting features, and on each of them Extract the main direction. The resulting vector can be modeled using a support vector machine.
The deep learning algorithms use features autonomously learned by neural networks to obtain high-level semantic information, which is significantly distinct from traditional algorithms [16-18]. Deep learning has been employed in various fields with great results [19- 24]. Patel et al. [25] first explored deep learning for micro-expression recognition tasks, and proposed a selective deep feature for micro-expression recognition to remove redundant features. Peng et al [26] proposed Dual temporal scale convolutional neural network (DTSCNN), which uses different network streams to adapt the micro-expression video sequences with different frame rates to avoid the overfitting problem. At the same time, the optical stream sequences are added to the shallow network, which allows the network to obtain high level features. Verma [27] et al. proposed the Lateral Accretive Hybrid Network (LEARNet) to capture the micro-features of facial expressions, adding accretion layers (AL) to the network.
3. Proposed Algorithm
The proposed algorithm contains the following three steps:
1. Preprocessing: to fetch onset frames and apex frames from micro-expression video sequences, which are then face aligned and cropped.
2. Optical flow features elicitation: to extracting the motion characteristics caused by facial muscles when a person shows micro-expressions.
3. Classification using Improved MobileNetV2: to improve the expressiveness of the optical flow features extracted in the second step, it allows further learning of relevant spatiotemporal context information.
A simplified flowchart of the proposed method is presented in Fig. 1. The following subsections will introduce each step in detail one by one.
Fig. 1. Simplified flowchart
3.1 Preprocessing
Before face alignment and cropping, the onset frame and apex frame must be positioned first. The position of the corresponding frame has been marked in the CASME II database, and the corresponding marked frame in the data set can be directly taken out. In the image p reprocessing process, OpenCV and Dlib libraries are used to detect and annotate 68 key features of the face. Rectangles are drawn to crop onset and apex frames based on the detected key points. Since there are various postures and angles in the face images collected by the camera, the face alignment is used to make them more suitable for micro-expression recognition. The left inner-eye coordinate (x1,y1) and the right inner-eye coordinate (x2,y2) are selected among the marked feature key points, and the horizontal face angle θ and the human-eye distance dist are calculated as shown in (1). Taking the midpoint of the face-eye distance as the center of rotation (x0,y0) , the coordinates of the rotation are calculated as shown in (2). The preprocessing display diagram is shown in Fig. 2.
\(\left\{\begin{array}{l} \theta=\arctan \left[\left(y_{2}-y_{1}\right) /\left(x_{2}-x_{1}\right)\right] \\ d i s t=\sqrt{\left(y_{2}-y_{1}\right)^{2}+\left(x_{2}-x_{1}\right)^{2}} \end{array}\right.\) (1)
\(\left\{\begin{array}{c} x^{\prime}=\left(x-x_{0}\right) \cos \theta+\left(y-y_{0}\right)(-\sin \theta)+x_{0} \\ y^{\prime}=\left(x-x_{0}\right) \sin \theta+\left(y-y_{0}\right) \cos \theta+y_{0} \end{array}\right.\) (2)
Fig. 2. Preprocessing display diagram
3.2 Optical Flow Features Elicitation
The optical flow method is usually based on two premise assumptions:
1. The illumination energy of the front and rear frames remains unchanged, that is, the brightness and all channel values are constant;
2. The movement of the same pixel between adjacent frames is small.
The micro-expression change range is low, the relative displacement between frames is small, and there are similar motions between adjacent pixels; moreover, the micro-expression duration is very short, the interval from the onset frame to the apex frame is only 1/25~1/5 seconds, the brightness of the image between frames basically does not change, so the properties of micro-expression dictate that its video sequences satisfy exactly the above two basic assumptions [28].
Suppose the light energy of a point in the first frame is expressed as I (x,y,t), where (x,y) is the pixel coordinate, t is time, and after time dt, the point has moved dx, dy distance. The intensity of the two adjacent frames is achieved as:
I(x,y,t) = I(x + dx,y + dy,t + dt) (3)
By performing Taylor expansion on (3), it transforms into the form:
\(I(x, y, t)=I(x, y, t)+\frac{\partial I}{\partial x} d x+\frac{\partial I}{\partial y} d y+\frac{\partial I}{\partial t} d t\) (4)
\(\frac{\partial I}{\partial x} d x+\frac{\partial I}{\partial y} d y+\frac{\partial I}{\partial t} d t=0\) (5)
By dividing both sides of the equations by dt:
Ixu + Iyv + It = 0 (6)
\(I_{x}=\frac{\partial I}{\partial x} ; I_{y}=\frac{\partial I}{\partial y} d y\) (7)
\(u=\frac{d x}{d t} ; v=\frac{d y}{d t}\) (8)
where u and v are the horizontal and vertical component of the optical flow field respectively. The constant brightness assumption only yields a constraint equation that is not sufficient to solve for the displacements u and v in the x and y directions, which is the pathological problem of solving for optical flow fields. Therefore, additional constraints on the displacement field vectors are required to solve the optical flow field model. Horn et al. [29] add a smoothness constraint to the optical flow constraint, which assumes that the velocity of the object's motion is locally smooth in most cases. In particular, when the target is in a rigid motion without deformation, each adjacent pixel should have the same velocity, i.e. the rate of change of velocity of the adjacent points is 0. Thus, the solution of the optical flow field is transformed into an energy generalized minimal value problem:
\(\min _{u, v}\left\{E_{\mathrm{H}-\mathrm{S}}=\int_{\Omega}\left(|\nabla u|^{2}+|\nabla v|^{2}\right) \mathrm{d} \Omega+\lambda \int_{\Omega}\left(I_{x} u+I_{y} v+I_{t}\right)^{2} \mathrm{~d} \Omega\right\}\) (9)
The first term penalizes large variations in the optical flow field in order to obtain a smooth velocity field. The second term is the data term, i.e. the basic optical flow constraint, which assumes constant grey values before and after the motion of the corresponding point. λ is the regularization parameter, which is a weighting parameter associated with the regular and data terms. Since the regular term of the H-S model adopts smoothness constraints, the discontinuity of the displacement field cannot be maintained, which will cause severe blurring and loss of important information during the image evolution. To overcome the disadvantages of the H-S model, Pock et al. [30] proposed a TV-L1 optical flow model based on a variational approach, and improved the optical flow constraint by introducing a variable w. The modeling of light variation by w was obtained:
\(\min _{u, v, w}\left\{E_{\text {TV-L1 }}=\int_{\Omega}(|\nabla u|+|\nabla v|+|\nabla w|) \mathrm{d} \Omega+\lambda \int_{\Omega}|\rho(u, v, w)| \mathrm{d} \Omega\right\}\) (10)
where ρ(u,v,w) = Ix(u − u0) + Iy(v − v0) + It + βw. The parameter β is a weighting factor for the light change term. Although the changes are small compared with the H-S model, the registration accuracy has been greatly improved. First, the total variation regular term keeps the discontinuity of the displacement field and protects the edge information from being blurred during the diffusion process. This regular term after replacement is the same as the regular term of the famous ROF (Rudin, Osher, Fatemi) model [31], and the ROF model has a good denoising effect while keeping the edge information from being blurred, precisely because of the Non-quadratic regular term. Secondly, the data items are less sensitive to changes in luminance than the H-S model using a robust L1 parametrization [32].
In order to be able to improve the robustness of the method as much as possible, the optical flow technique adopted for the method in this paper is TV-L1 [33] method described above. Fig. 3 shows some typical visualizations of optical flow features, which are calculated by the TVL1 method for various emotion samples. The approximate locations of key points on a face, such as the eyes, eyebrows, mouth, nose, cheeks, etc., can be identified in most visualizations through human eye observation. The facial muscle movements of ‘happiness’ emotion are mainly concentrated in the cheek area, ‘disgust’ emotion in the eyebrow area, ‘repression’ emotion in the mouth area, ‘surprise’ emotion in the eye area, and ‘others’ emotions in the forehead area. However, not all samples followed the above pattern.
Fig. 3. Visualization of optical flow features
3.3 Classification Using Improved MobileNetV2
MobileNetV2 is Sandler's proposed neural network architecture for facial attribute detection. It has been trained and evaluated on Google's internal database [34] and can be applied to mobile devices. Its main innovations are the introduction of inverted residuals and linear bottlenecks, and the realization of recent results balancing inference time and performance for generic benchmarks such as ImageNet [35], COCO [36] and VOC [37]. The MobileNetV2 network structure is shown in Table 1. Compared to most operational approaches our training approach is simple and straightforward: We do not perform a sophisticated alignment on the network architecture, just replace the classifiers.
Table 1. MobileNetV2 network structure: l represents the expansion coefficient of the intermediate convolution channel; o represents the number of output channels; r represents the layer repeated several times; s represents the stride of the convolution; b represents the bottleneck
MobileNetV2 uses the SoftMax classifier. SoftMax regression is an improvement on Logistic regression, which is used for biclass problems, and SoftMax is used for multiclass problems. When a given sample is inputted, it will output a value between 0 and 1, which represents the probability that the input sample belongs to that class. For expression image x, the probability of its class j is
\(p\left(y^{(i)}=j \mid \mathbf{x}^{(i)}, \theta\right)=\frac{e^{\theta_{j}^{T} \mathbf{x}^{(i)}}}{\sum_{i=1}^{k} e^{\theta_{j}^{T} \mathbf{x}^{(i)}}}\) (11)
where p(y(i) = j|x(i),θ) is the probability that expression image x corresponds to each expression category j, and θ is the parameter to be fitted. Ultimately, the category with the highest probability value is the final result of the neural network's predictive classification. The characteristics of micro-expressions determine that the distinction between classes of different micro-expressions is not high. In this situation, since Softmax layer minimizes cross entropy from the global point of view, it will probably lead to misclassification once there are negative samples with large differences. So it is not appropriate to use Softmax classifier for micro-expression recognition. To solve this problem, SVM is used as the classifier. SVM tries to find the maximum margin between data points of different categories. It has better differentiability, and the regularization term penalizes the wrongly scored data more strongly, with strong generalization capabilities, thus facilitating the differentiation of micro-expression features. Its Hinge loss function is defined as:
\(\operatorname{loss}(\mathbf{x}, \mathrm{y})=\frac{1}{N} \sum_{i=1, i \neq y}^{N} \max \left(0,\left(\operatorname{margin}-\mathbf{x}_{y}+\mathbf{x}_{i}\right)^{p}\right)\) (12)
where 1 ≤ y ≤ N denotes the label.
4. Experiments
4.1 Database
The CASME II micro-expression database provided by Fu Xiaolan was used in the experiment, including 255 micro-expression video samples. The sampling rate was 200 frames/s, and the resolution was 280×340 pixels. 26 subjects were collected from Asia. Micro expressions were classified into seven categories: disgust (63 samples), happiness (32 samples), surprise (28 samples), repression (27 samples), sadness (4 samples), fear (2 samples) and others (99). Because the number of samples of sadness and fear is too small, this experiment only uses 249 samples from the other five classes, and the composition distribution is shown in Fig. 4. It can be seen that the number of ‘others’ samples accounts for a large part.
Fig. 4. Emotion distribution of CASME II database
4.2 Experiment Settings
In these experiments, OpenCV and Dlib libraries are used in the preprocessing part, and Pytorch framework is used to build the neural network structure in the deep learning part. At the same time, NVDIA CUDA framework 10.1 and cuDNN 8.0.3 library are used in this experiment. The CPU of the hardware platform used for these experiments is Intel Core i9- 9900X, the memory is 64 GB, the video card model is NVDIA Geforce RTX 2080TI * 2, and the hard disk is SAMSUNG 970 EVO PLUS 1TB.
In this paper, Leave-One-Subject-Out Cross-Validation (LOSOCV) method is adopted. Each collected subject is taken as the test dataset, and 26 training and testing processes are conducted on the CASME II database. During the validation process, all the micro-expression samples will be operated by the classifier once. This validation method is mostly used in current research work, with the advantage that the maximum possible number of samples are used for training in each iteration, making full use of the data, sampling is deterministic. At the same time, the disadvantage that this validation method increases the computational overhead is reduced to a very low level because of the small volume of the micro-expression dataset. In addition, there is some variation in the micro-expressions of each collected subject, and using all the micro-expression samples of a single collected subject as a test set can better reflect the generalization ability of the method. In this section, the overall accuracy of the database is determined to evaluate the performance of the method, and the calculation formula of the accuracy is defined as:
\(\text { accuracy }=\frac{\text { Total number of correctly identified samples }}{\text { Total number of database samples }}\) (13)
To further measure the performance of the classifier comprehensively, an additional evaluation criterion F1-score was added to the experiment, defined as:
\(\text { F1-score }=2 \times \frac{\text { Precision } \times \text { Recall }}{\text { Precision }+\text { Recall }}\) (14)
\(\text { Precison }=\frac{T P}{T P+F P}\) (15)
\(\text { Recall }=\frac{T P}{T P+F N}\) (16)
where TP indicates true positive, FN indicates false negative, and FP indicates false positive.
4.3 Results and Discussion
In order to investigate whether the TVL1 optical flow method of extracting motion features is effective for micro-expression recognition, we conducted four sets of experiments using apex frames, u, v, and u + v (refer to (8)) as inputs, and classifiers for the method proposed in this paper, respectively. The results of the four sets of experiments are shown in Table 2. The extracted optical flow features are more representative than apex frames, the recognition rate is increased by 18.47%, and F1-score is increased by 0.2847. The effect of using only one direction of the optical flow feature is slightly better than using an apex frame and lower than using a full optical flow. This is due to the incomplete amount of information contained in a single directional optical flow feature. At the same time, it also proves that TV-L1 optical flow can effectively reflect the characteristics of micro-expression.
Table 2. Experimental results of different inputs on CASME II database in terms of recognition accuracy and F1-score
To validate the effectiveness of the SVM classifier, a fair comparison is established, which selects two approaches (i.e., MobileNetV2 + Softmax and MobileNetV2 + SVM approach) and the experimental configuration of each comparison method is set to be similar. In Table 3, it can be seen that the MobileNetV2 network using the SVM classifier has a 14.46% improvement in accuracy and a 0.1871 improvement in F1-score. The lift from replacing Softmax with SVM is huge.
Table 3. Experimental results of different classifiers on CASME II database in terms of recognition accuracy and F1-score
Table 4 shows the experimental results of the various methods on CASME II database, and the algorithm in this paper improves in terms of accuracy compared to other micro-expression recognition methods and outperforms most algorithms in terms of F1-score. But overall the accuracy and F1-score are still not very high. This is due to the unbalanced distribution of emotions, which is shown in Fig. 4. In traditional deep learning, adequate model prediction of results requires that the database sample size is sufficient and that the training dataset and test dataset conform to the same distribution. Clearly the present database does not satisfy the conditions.
Table 4. Comparison between our method and some existing methods on CASME II database
For a more detailed analysis to the recognition performance of the five classes of micro- expression, confusion matrix is calculated, as shown in Table 5. In general, confusion matrix is a visualization tool used in machine learning to analyze the prediction results of classification models. It depicts the relationship between the true attributes of the sample data and the classification prediction result class in the form of a matrix. It can be seen that ‘others’ emotion has the highest accuracy compared to the remaining emotions. This is due to the fact that ‘others’ emotion has the highest proportion in the entire CASME II database (refer to Fig. 4). Surprise emotion have a sample size just above repression, but they have the second recognition rate. The recognition rate for the remaining three emotions is moderate and needs improvement. In particular, the disgust emotion scored low despite its high sample size. This may be due to the fact that it is easy to confuse with ‘others’ emotion.
Table 5. Confusion matrix obtained by our method on CASME II database
5. Conclusion and Future Work
In this study, an improved micro-expression recognition method based on optical flow features and MobileNetV2 in combination with SVM is proposed. Our experimental evaluation on CASME II database showed that the accuracy and F1-score are 53.01% and 0.5231. It can distinguish micro-expression classes more precisely than existing methods. In fact, micro expression only involves local areas of the face, and there are some irrelevant muscle actions when the face produces micro-expression. Therefore, the feature vectors extracted using the global approach for faces uniformly contain more redundant information, which can reduce the expressiveness of the vectors and hence the recognition effect. Excluding areas that have nothing to do with micro-expressions is a major challenge. Since the current micro-expression database is extremely small, macro-expressions and micro-expressions have some commonalities, so learning a priori knowledge from the field of macro-expression recognition is also worth studying. In addition, efforts can be focused on solving the problem of imbalance of sample data in the micro-expression database, so that various existing methods can present better recognition results.
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