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Explainable automated recognition of emotional states from canine facial expressions: the case of positive anticipation and frustration

Version 4 2024-03-12, 20:55
Version 3 2023-10-29, 18:08
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-12, 20:55 authored by Tali Boneh-Shitrit, Marcelo Feighelstein, Anna Zamansky, Annika Bremhorst, Shir Amir, Tomer Distelfeld, Yaniv Dassa, Sharon Yaroshetsky, Stefanie Riemer, Ilan Shimshoni, Daniel MillsDaniel Mills

In animal research, automation of affective states recognition has so far mainly addressed pain in a few species. Emotional states remain uncharted territories, especially in dogs, due to the complexity of their facial morphology and expressions. This study contributes to fill this gap in two aspects. First, it is the first to address dog emotional states using a dataset obtained in a controlled experimental setting, including videos from (n = 29) Labrador Retrievers assumed to be in two experimentally induced emotional states: negative (frustration) and positive (anticipation). The dogs’ facial expressions were measured using the Dogs Facial Action Coding System (DogFACS). Two different approaches are compared in relation to our aim: (1) a DogFACS-based approach with a two-step pipeline consisting of (i) a DogFACS variable detector and (ii) a positive/negative state Decision Tree classifier; (2) An approach using deep learning techniques with no intermediate representation. The approaches reach accuracy of above 71% and 89%, respectively, with the deep learning approach performing better. Secondly, this study is also the first to study explainability of AI models in the context of emotion in animals. The DogFACS-based approach provides decision trees, that is a mathematical representation which reflects previous findings by human experts in relation to certain facial expressions (DogFACS variables) being correlates of specific emotional states. The deep learning approach offers a different, visual form of explainability in the form of heatmaps reflecting regions of focus of the network’s attention, which in some cases show focus clearly related to the nature of particular DogFACS variables. These heatmaps may hold the key to novel insights on the sensitivity of the network to nuanced pixel patterns reflecting information invisible to the human eye.

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School affiliated with

  • Department of Life Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Nature

Volume

12

Issue

22611

Pages/Article Number

1-16

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

ISSN

0028-0386

Date Submitted

2023-02-17

Date Accepted

2022-12-26

Date of First Publication

2022-12-30

Date of Final Publication

2022-12-30

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-02-17

ePrints ID

53467

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