MOL: Joint Estimation of Micro-Expression, Optical Flow, and Landmark via Transformer-Graph-Style Convolution.

Journal: IEEE transactions on pattern analysis and machine intelligence
Published Date:

Abstract

Facial micro-expression recognition (MER) is a challenging problem, due to transient and subtle micro-expression (ME) actions. Most existing methods depend on hand-crafted features, key frames like onset, apex, and offset frames, or deep networks limited by small-scale and low-diversity datasets. In this paper, we propose an end-to-end micro-action-aware deep learning framework with advantages from transformer, graph convolution, and vanilla convolution. In particular, we propose a novel F5C block composed of fully-connected convolution and channel correspondence convolution to directly extract local-global features from a sequence of raw frames, without the prior knowledge of key frames. The transformer-style fully-connected convolution is proposed to extract local features while maintaining global receptive fields, and the graph-style channel correspondence convolution is introduced to model the correlations among feature patterns. Moreover, MER, optical flow estimation, and facial landmark detection are jointly trained by sharing the local-global features. The two latter tasks contribute to capturing facial subtle action information for MER, which can alleviate the impact of insufficient training data. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our framework (i) outperforms the state-of-the-art MER methods on CASME II, SAMM, and SMIC benchmarks, (ii) works well for optical flow estimation and facial landmark detection, and (iii) can capture facial subtle muscle actions in local regions associated with MEs. The code is available at https://github.com/CYF-cuber/MOL.

Authors

  • Zhiwen Shao
  • Yifan Cheng
    Department of Gynecologic Oncology, Women's Hospital, School of Medicine, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, 310006, China.
  • Feiran Li
  • Yong Zhou
    National Institutes for Food and Drug Control, Beijing, 100050, China.
  • Xuequan Lu
    School of Information Technology, Deakin University, Australia. Electronic address: xuequan.lu@deakin.edu.au.
  • Yuan Xie
  • Lizhuang Ma
    School of Computer Science and Technology, East China Normal University, 200062, Shanghai, China.

Keywords

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