Toward unbiased emotion recognition: overcoming user bias with siamese convolutional networks
Purpose: Emotion Recognition (ER) systems are designed for an accurate inference of human emotions. Emotions are elicited by stimuli provided by the environment, such as social interactions or exposure to salient events, and are expressed by individuals in a strictly subjective manner. ER systems ar...
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Published in | Signal, image and video processing Vol. 19; no. 11 |
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Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
London
Springer London
01.11.2025
Springer Nature B.V |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Purpose:
Emotion Recognition (ER) systems are designed for an accurate inference of human emotions. Emotions are elicited by stimuli provided by the environment, such as social interactions or exposure to salient events, and are expressed by individuals in a strictly subjective manner. ER systems are usually based on machine learning approaches applied to physiological signals, which provide an authentic representation of emotions as they are not easily controlled or masked. However, ER remains a challenging task, due to a well-established user bias related to individual response specificity (IRS). When multiple subjects are considered together in a dataset, IRS makes the ER task more difficult at the dataset level than at the subject level.
Methods:
In this work, we accomplish a multi-class ER task based on physiological signals while addressing the user bias problem. We propose a mitigation strategy based on Siamese Convolutional Networks (SCN). We perform a qualitative and quantitative analysis of user bias, comparing the feature space of the proposed SCN with a baseline hand-crafted feature space.
Results:
Our SCN reached state-of-the-art performance in the considered multi-class ER task and showed great capability of disentangling user bias, by reducing the gap between subject-level and dataset-level metrics.
Conclusion:
Our main contribution is the proposal of a user bias mitigation strategy for ER tasks, which takes advantage of the SCN capability of producing subject-independent latent representations. |
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Bibliography: | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 |
ISSN: | 1863-1703 1863-1711 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11760-025-04500-1 |