Abstract—Laughter is clearly an audiovisual event, consist-ing of the laughter vocalization and of facial activity, mainly around the mouth and sometimes in the upper face. However, past research on laughter recognition has mainly focused on the information available in the audio channel only, mainly due to the lack of suitable audiovisual data. Only recently few works have been published which combine audio and visual information and most of them deal with the problem of discriminating laughter from speech or other nonlinguistic vocalisations using presegmented data. There are very few works on audiovisual laughter detection from unsegmented audiovisual streams and have either been tested on small datasets or use coarse visual features. As...
Laughter recognition is an underexplored area of research. Our goal in this work was to develop an a...
With the development of new technologies and approaches in the field of social signal processing, co...
In this paper, we investigate the detection of laughter from the user's nonverbal full-body movement...
Previous research on automatic laughter detection has mainly been focused on audio-based detection. ...
Past research on automatic laughter classification/detection has focused mainly on audio-based appro...
Past research on automatic laughter detection has focused mainly on audio-based detection. Here we p...
Past research on automatic laughter detection has focused mainly on audio-based detection. Here we p...
Previous research on automatic laughter detection has mainly been focused on audio-based detection. ...
Laughter is a highly variable signal, and can express a spectrum of emotions. This makes the automat...
Non-linguistic signals, specifically, laughter offers a lot of information such as cues on the emoti...
Laughter is a highly variable signal, which can be caused by a spectrum of emotions. This makes the ...
This paper presents the results of an empirical study suggesting that, while laughter is a very good...
Abstract. Spontaneous human speech contains a lot of sounds that are not proper speech, yet carry me...
In this paper, we focus on the development of new methods to detect and analyze laughter, in order t...
Emotions can be recognized by audible paralinguistic cues in speech. By detecting these paralinguist...
Laughter recognition is an underexplored area of research. Our goal in this work was to develop an a...
With the development of new technologies and approaches in the field of social signal processing, co...
In this paper, we investigate the detection of laughter from the user's nonverbal full-body movement...
Previous research on automatic laughter detection has mainly been focused on audio-based detection. ...
Past research on automatic laughter classification/detection has focused mainly on audio-based appro...
Past research on automatic laughter detection has focused mainly on audio-based detection. Here we p...
Past research on automatic laughter detection has focused mainly on audio-based detection. Here we p...
Previous research on automatic laughter detection has mainly been focused on audio-based detection. ...
Laughter is a highly variable signal, and can express a spectrum of emotions. This makes the automat...
Non-linguistic signals, specifically, laughter offers a lot of information such as cues on the emoti...
Laughter is a highly variable signal, which can be caused by a spectrum of emotions. This makes the ...
This paper presents the results of an empirical study suggesting that, while laughter is a very good...
Abstract. Spontaneous human speech contains a lot of sounds that are not proper speech, yet carry me...
In this paper, we focus on the development of new methods to detect and analyze laughter, in order t...
Emotions can be recognized by audible paralinguistic cues in speech. By detecting these paralinguist...
Laughter recognition is an underexplored area of research. Our goal in this work was to develop an a...
With the development of new technologies and approaches in the field of social signal processing, co...
In this paper, we investigate the detection of laughter from the user's nonverbal full-body movement...