Automated measurement of infant and mother Duchenne facial expressions in the Face‐to‐Face/Still‐Face

Author:

Ahn Yeojin Amy1ORCID,Önal Ertuğrul Itir2,Chow Sy‐Miin3,Cohn Jeffrey F.4,Messinger Daniel S.156

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology University of Miami Coral Gables Florida USA

2. Department of Information and Computing Sciences Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

3. Department of Human Development and Family Studies Pennsylvania State University State College Pennsylvania USA

4. Department of Psychology University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

5. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering University of Miami Coral Gables Florida USA

6. Departments of Pediatrics and Music Engineering University of Miami Coral Gables Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractAlthough still‐face effects are well‐studied, little is known about the degree to which the Face‐to‐Face/Still‐Face (FFSF) is associated with the production of intense affective displays. Duchenne smiling expresses more intense positive affect than non‐Duchenne smiling, while Duchenne cry‐faces express more intense negative affect than non‐Duchenne cry‐faces. Forty 4‐month‐old infants and their mothers completed the FFSF, and key affect‐indexing facial Action Units (AUs) were coded by expert Facial Action Coding System coders for the first 30 s of each FFSF episode. Computer vision software, automated facial affect recognition (AFAR), identified AUs for the entire 2‐min episodes. Expert coding and AFAR produced similar infant and mother Duchenne and non‐Duchenne FFSF effects, highlighting the convergent validity of automated measurement. Substantive AFAR analyses indicated that both infant Duchenne and non‐Duchenne smiling declined from the FF to the SF, but only Duchenne smiling increased from the SF to the RE. In similar fashion, the magnitude of mother Duchenne smiling changes over the FFSF were 2–4 times greater than non‐Duchenne smiling changes. Duchenne expressions appear to be a sensitive index of intense infant and mother affective valence that are accessible to automated measurement and may be a target for future FFSF research.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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1. The origins and development of aesthetics;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2024-07-15

2. Survey of Automated Methods for Nonverbal Behavior Analysis in Parent-Child Interactions;2024 IEEE 18th International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition (FG);2024-05-27

3. Automated Detection of Faces in Infant and Parent First-Person Views During Play;2024 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning (ICDL);2024-05-20

4. Automated facial expression measurement in a longitudinal sample of 4- and 8-month-olds: Baby FaceReader 9 and manual coding of affective expressions;Behavior Research Methods;2024-01-25

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