DocumentCode
1766353
Title
Detection of Psychological Stress Using a Hyperspectral Imaging Technique
Author
Tong Chen ; Yuen, P.C. ; Richardson, Mark ; Guangyuan Liu ; Zhishun She
Author_Institution
Sch. of Electron. & Inf. Eng., Southwest Univ., Chongqing, China
Volume
5
Issue
4
fYear
2014
fDate
Oct.-Dec. 1 2014
Firstpage
391
Lastpage
405
Abstract
The detection of stress at early stages is beneficial to both individuals and communities. However, traditional stress detection methods that use physiological signals are contact-based and require sensors to be in contact with test subjects for measurement. In this paper, we present a method to detect psychological stress in a non-contact manner using a human physiological response. In particular, we utilize a hyperspectral imaging (HSI) technique to extract the tissue oxygen saturation (StO2) value as a physiological feature for stress detection. Our experimental results indicate that this new feature may be independent from perspiration and ambient temperature. Trier Social Stress Tests (TSSTs) on 21 volunteers demonstrated a significant difference $p\\< 0.005$ and a large practical discrimination (d 1/4 1.37) between normalized baseline and stress StO2 levels. The accuracy for stress recognition from baseline using a binary classifier was 76.19 and 88.1 percent for the automatic and manual selections of the classifier threshold, respectively. These results suggest that the StO2 level could serve as a new modality to recognize stress at standoff distances.
Keywords
face recognition; hyperspectral imaging; image classification; medical image processing; psychology; HSI technique; StO2 value; TSSTs; Trier social stress tests; binary classifier; human physiological response; hyperspectral imaging technique; noncontact psychological stress detection; stress recognition; tissue oxygen saturation value; Biomedical image processing; Hyperspectral imaging; Physiology; Psychology; Stress; Temperature measurement; Transient analysis; Stress detection; hyperspectral imaging; remote sensing; stress detection; tissue oxygen saturation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Affective Computing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1949-3045
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TAFFC.2014.2362513
Filename
6919328
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