A Multimodal Late Fusion Framework for Physiological Sensor and Audio-Signal-Based Stress Detection: An Experimental Study and Public Dataset
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- We provide a multimodal dataset including physiological signals and speech cues for stress detection. To our knowledge, this is the first dataset providing such data types for the purpose of stress detection.
- Our dataset also includes data from a real-life disaster management scenario.
- We describe the decision-level fusion framework adopted that includes state-of-the-art machine learning-based methods for the analysis of each modality.
2. Related Work
2.1. Analysis Methods
2.1.1. Physiological Signal-Based Stress Detection
2.1.2. Audio-Based Stress Detection
2.1.3. Fusion of Physiological Signals and Vocal Cues
2.2. Public Datasets
2.2.1. WESAD Dataset
2.2.2. SWELL-KW
2.2.3. DRIVE-DB
2.2.4. Comparison with Our Dataset
3. Methods
3.1. Stress Induction Protocol
- Psychological:
- –
- –
- The descending subtraction test (Figure 1b). It is also a commonly used stress induction test [27], where the user is asked to begin counting backward from a certain number, subtracting each time another certain number. In the context of the training data collection experiment, the users were asked to begin with the number 1324, subtracting 17, until 17. If the users make a mistake, they must start over.
- –
- Explain a stressful situation in your life.
- –
- Explain how the day has been.
- –
- Listen to relaxing music. The two later tasks are used to monitor situations of calmness.
- Physiological:
3.2. Data Acquisition
3.2.1. Physiological Data Collection
3.2.2. Audio Data Collection
3.3. Participants
3.4. Data Analysis
3.4.1. Physiological Data Analysis
3.4.2. Audio Data Analysis
3.5. Fusion of Physiological and Audio Stress Levels
4. Results
4.1. Training Results
4.1.1. Physiological Sensor Results
4.1.2. Audio-Based Results
4.1.3. Fusion Results
4.2. Pilot Results
- Physiological signals are continuously monitored using the smart vest.
- Physiological data are fed to the sensor-based stress-level detection module, which has the following operation:
- –
- Stack packages of data until one minute duration is reached. Since the smart vest produces 5 s long packages of data, 12 packages are stacked each time.
- –
- Features are extracted and selected as described in the previous sections.
- –
- Feed selected features to the trained XGB model for physiological sensor-based stress detection.
- If audio recordings are received, they are analyzed with the following operation:
- –
- Audio signals are optionally segmented (especially for longer recordings).
- –
- Feature extraction is performed following the procedure described in the “Audio Data Analysis” subsection.
- –
- Features are fed to the trained Gaussian process regression model for the audio-based stress-level detection.
- Sensor-based stress level and audio-based stress level are fed to the fusion SVM model for the fused stress-level detection.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Recorded Parameter | Description | Values (per 1 Unit Metric) | Sampling Rate |
---|---|---|---|
ECG Value | Electric signal measuring the ECG | 0.8 mV | 250 Hz |
ECG quality Value | ECG signal quality | 0–255 (0 = poor, 255 = excellent) | 5 Hz |
ECGHR Value | Heart rate | Beats/minute | 5 Hz |
ECGRR Value | R-R intervals | number of samples between R-R peaks | 5 Hz |
ECGHRV Value | Heart rate variability | ms | 60 Hz |
AccX-Y-Z Value | Acceleration in X-Y-Z axes | g | 25 Hz |
GyroX-Y-Z Value | Angular velocity in X-Y-Z axes | 0.122°/s | 25 Hz |
MagX-Y-Z Value | Magnetic field in X-Y-Z axes | 0.6 µT | 25 Hz |
Q0-Q1-Q2-Q3 Value | Quaternions from main electronic device (Q0, Q1, Q2, Q3 components) | Q14 format | 25 Hz |
RespPiezo Value | Electric signal measuring the chest pressure on the piezoelectric point | 0.8 mV | 25 Hz |
BR Value | Breathing rate | Breaths/minute | 5 Hz |
BA Value | Breathing amplitude | logic levels | 15 Hz |
ECG | RSP | IMU | ECG + RSP | ECG + IMU | RSP + IMU | ECG + RSP + IMU | Late Mean | Late Median | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SVM | 0.1709 | 0.1530 | 0.1305 | 0.1723 | 0.1306 | 0.1305 | 0.1305 | 0.1412 | 0.1363 |
kNN | 0.1439 | 0.1553 | 0.1107 | 0.1285 | 0.1106 | 0.1106 | 0.1107 | 0.1170 | 0.1125 |
RF | 0.1113 | 0.1280 | 0.0918 | 0.1073 | 0.0916 | 0.0871 | 0.0886 | 0.0984 | 0.1025 |
XGB | 0.1237 | 0.1307 | 0.0844 | 0.1092 | 0.0835 | 0.0858 | 0.0730 | 0.0958 | 0.1006 |
RFE | PCA | GA | |
---|---|---|---|
SVM | 0.1052 | 0.1201 | 0.1305 |
kNN | 0.1023 | 0.1106 | 0.1106 |
RF | 0.0790 | 0.1044 | 0.0742 |
XGB | 0.0772 | 0.0953 | 0.0567 |
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Xefteris, V.-R.; Dominguez, M.; Grivolla, J.; Tsanousa, A.; Zaffanela, F.; Monego, M.; Symeonidis, S.; Diplaris, S.; Wanner, L.; Vrochidis, S.; et al. A Multimodal Late Fusion Framework for Physiological Sensor and Audio-Signal-Based Stress Detection: An Experimental Study and Public Dataset. Electronics 2023, 12, 4871. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234871
Xefteris V-R, Dominguez M, Grivolla J, Tsanousa A, Zaffanela F, Monego M, Symeonidis S, Diplaris S, Wanner L, Vrochidis S, et al. A Multimodal Late Fusion Framework for Physiological Sensor and Audio-Signal-Based Stress Detection: An Experimental Study and Public Dataset. Electronics. 2023; 12(23):4871. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234871
Chicago/Turabian StyleXefteris, Vasileios-Rafail, Monica Dominguez, Jens Grivolla, Athina Tsanousa, Francesco Zaffanela, Martina Monego, Spyridon Symeonidis, Sotiris Diplaris, Leo Wanner, Stefanos Vrochidis, and et al. 2023. "A Multimodal Late Fusion Framework for Physiological Sensor and Audio-Signal-Based Stress Detection: An Experimental Study and Public Dataset" Electronics 12, no. 23: 4871. https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics12234871