Facial Thermal and Blood Perfusion Patterns of Human Emotions: Proof-of-Concept
Victor H. Aristizabal-Tique (1), Marcela Henao-Perez (2), Diana, Carolina Lopez-Medina (2), Renato Zambrano-Cruz (3), Gloria Diaz-Londo\~nod, (4) ((1) School of Engineering - Universidad Cooperativa de Colombia -, Medellin - Colombia

TL;DR
This study explores the use of thermographic and blood perfusion data to identify human emotions, finding blood perfusion images to be more effective biomarkers than thermography for emotion detection.
Contribution
It demonstrates that blood perfusion imaging provides clearer contrast and more reliable indicators of emotional valence than thermographic data.
Findings
Blood perfusion decreases in negative emotions, especially on the left side.
Blood perfusion images show greater contrast than thermographic images.
Blood perfusion correlates with vasomotor responses, indicating its potential as a biomarker.
Abstract
In this work, a preliminary study of proof-of-concept was conducted to evaluate the performance of the thermographic and blood perfusion data when emotions of positive and negative valence are applied, where the blood perfusion data are obtained from the thermographic data. The images were obtained for baseline, positive, and negative valence according to the protocol of the Geneva Affective Picture Database. Absolute and percentage differences of average values of the data between the valences and the baseline were calculated for different regions of interest (forehead, periorbital eyes, cheeks, nose and upper lips). For negative valence, a decrease in temperature and blood perfusion was observed in the regions of interest, and the effect was greater on the left side than on the right side. In positive valence, the temperature and blood perfusion increased in some cases, showing a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfrared Thermography in Medicine
