Human Face Emotions Recognition from Thermal Images Using DenseNet

Authors

  • Babu Rajendra Prasad VIT-AP University Research Scholar, School of CSE Amaravathi, Vijayawada, Andrapradesh, India https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8489-3990
  • Dr. B. Sai Chandana VIT-AP University School of CSE, Amaravathi, Vijayawada, Andrapradesh, India.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32985/ijeces.14.2.5

Keywords:

Deep learning, detection, face expressions classification, feature extraction, pre-processing, thermal face recognition, thermal image

Abstract

In the current scenario face identification and recognition is an important technique in surveillance. The face is a necessary biometric in humans. Therefore face detection plays a major job in computer vision applications. Several face recognition and emotions classification approaches have been presented throughout the last few decades of research to improve the rate of face recognition for thermal pictures. However, in real-time, lighting conditions might change due to several factors, such as the different times of capture, weather, etc. Due to variations in lighting intensity, the performance of the facial expression recognition system is not good. This paper proposed a model for human thermal face detection and expression classification. Four main steps were involved in this research. Initially, the Difference of the Gaussian (DOG) filter is utilized to crop the input thermal images and then normalize the images using the median filter in pre-processing step. Then, Efficient Net is used for extracting features such as shape, location, and occurrences from thermal face images. After that, detect human faces utilized by the YOLOv4 technique to better emotions classification. Finally, classify the emotions on faces by using the DenseNet technique into seven emotions such as happy, sad, disgust, surprise, anger, fear, and neutral. The proposed method outperforms state-of-art techniques for face recognition on thermal pictures, and classifies the expressions, according to experimentations on the RGB-D-T database. The accuracy, precision, recall, and f1-score metrics will be utilized with the database to assess the efficacy of the proposed methodology. The proposed models achieve a high classification accuracy of 95.97% on the RGB-D-T database. Furthermore, the outcomes show good precision for various face recognition tasks.

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Published

2023-02-17

How to Cite

[1]
Babu Rajendra Prasad and Dr. B. Sai Chandana, “Human Face Emotions Recognition from Thermal Images Using DenseNet”, IJECES, vol. 14, no. 2, pp. 155-167, Feb. 2023.

Issue

Section

Original Scientific Papers