Litcius/Paper detail

FaceSense

Vimal Kakaraparthi, Qijia Shao, Charles J. Carver, Tien Pham, Nam Bui, Phuc Nguyen, Xia Zhou, Tam Vu

2021Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive Mobile Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Face touch is an unconscious human habit. Frequent touching of sensitive/mucosal facial zones (eyes, nose, and mouth) increases health risks by passing pathogens into the body and spreading diseases. Furthermore, accurate monitoring of face touch is critical for behavioral intervention. Existing monitoring systems only capture objects approaching the face, rather than detecting actual touches. As such, these systems are prone to false positives upon hand or object movement in proximity to one's face (e.g., picking up a phone). We present FaceSense, an ear-worn system capable of identifying actual touches and differentiating them between sensitive/mucosal areas from other facial areas. Following a multimodal approach, FaceSense integrates low-resolution thermal images and physiological signals. Thermal sensors sense the thermal infrared signal emitted by an approaching hand, while physiological sensors monitor impedance changes caused by skin deformation during a touch. Processed thermal and physiological signals are fed into a deep learning model (TouchNet) to detect touches and identify the facial zone of the touch. We fabricated prototypes using off-the-shelf hardware and conducted experiments with 14 participants while they perform various daily activities (e.g., drinking, talking). Results show a macro-F1-score of 83.4% for touch detection with leave-one-user-out cross-validation and a macro-F1-score of 90.1% for touch zone identification with a personalized model.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceArtificial intelligenceComputer visionFace detectionIdentification (biology)Face (sociological concept)SIGNAL (programming language)Human–computer interactionFacial recognition systemPattern recognition (psychology)BiologySociologyBotanyProgramming languageSocial scienceGaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyEmotion and Mood RecognitionTactile and Sensory Interactions