Abirami_Abstract
Abirami_Abstract
Abstract:
Facial expressions have always been universal media for showing emotions and therefore
emotion recognition is critical to further advancements of human - computer interaction. The
paper introduces a new affective computing method in the form of machine learning and
computer vision to classify emotions from facial expressions. A large database of facial
expressions labeled with emotions, including happiness, sadness, anger, and surprise is
developed to train and test the system. The system uses state – of – the - art algorithms including
deep learning and high advanced feature extraction methods, and then uses robustness and high
accuracy of the system to mention a few facial variation lighting condition, occlusions and other
forms, ensuring that the system will run in real time and not fall within the diverse scenarios.
Experimental results show that the introduced system outperforms alternative approaches with
regard to accuracy as well as robustness in emotion recognition. Such a breakthrough can finally
bring into life potential for intuitive systems that work as advocated by affective computing. The
applications of the system are diverse. In human - robot interaction it allows machines to
empathize with human emotions. In affective gaming, it allows dynamic gameplay adjustments
based on player emotions. For mental health monitoring the system aids in identifying emotional
distress offering potential for early intervention. This is a great leap toward designing intelligent
emotion - aware systems of HCI solutions and paving the way for more intuitive and context -
sensitive solutions that would eventually adapt easily to changing emotional states of users.