Enhancing Emotion Recognition in Incomplete Data: A Novel Cross-Modal Alignment, Reconstruction, and Refinement Framework

July 12, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing

πŸ‘» CAUSE OF DEATH: Ghosted
No code link whatsoever

"No code URL or promise found in abstract"

Evidence collected by the PWNC Scanner

Authors Haoqin Sun, Shiwan Zhao, Shaokai Li, Xiangyu Kong, Xuechen Wang, Aobo Kong, Jiaming Zhou, Yong Chen, Wenjia Zeng, Yong Qin arXiv ID 2407.09029 Category cs.MM: Multimedia Cross-listed cs.CV, cs.SD, eess.AS Citations 12 Venue IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
Multimodal emotion recognition systems rely heavily on the full availability of modalities, suffering significant performance declines when modal data is incomplete. To tackle this issue, we present the Cross-Modal Alignment, Reconstruction, and Refinement (CM-ARR) framework, an innovative approach that sequentially engages in cross-modal alignment, reconstruction, and refinement phases to handle missing modalities and enhance emotion recognition. This framework utilizes unsupervised distribution-based contrastive learning to align heterogeneous modal distributions, reducing discrepancies and modeling semantic uncertainty effectively. The reconstruction phase applies normalizing flow models to transform these aligned distributions and recover missing modalities. The refinement phase employs supervised point-based contrastive learning to disrupt semantic correlations and accentuate emotional traits, thereby enriching the affective content of the reconstructed representations. Extensive experiments on the IEMOCAP and MSP-IMPROV datasets confirm the superior performance of CM-ARR under conditions of both missing and complete modalities. Notably, averaged across six scenarios of missing modalities, CM-ARR achieves absolute improvements of 2.11% in WAR and 2.12% in UAR on the IEMOCAP dataset, and 1.71% and 1.96% in WAR and UAR, respectively, on the MSP-IMPROV dataset.
Community shame:
Not yet rated
Community Contributions

Found the code? Know the venue? Think something is wrong? Let us know!

πŸ“œ Similar Papers

In the same crypt β€” Multimedia

R.I.P. πŸ‘» Ghosted

Video Generation From Text

Yitong Li, Martin Renqiang Min, ... (+3 more)

cs.MM πŸ› AAAI πŸ“š 300 cites 8 years ago

Died the same way β€” πŸ‘» Ghosted