Authors
Hong Lu, Denise Frauendorfer, Mashfiqui Rabbi, Marianne Schmid Mast, Gokul T Chittaranjan, Andrew T Campbell, Daniel Gatica-Perez, Tanzeem Choudhury
Publication date
2012/9/5
Book
Proceedings of the 2012 ACM conference on ubiquitous computing
Pages
351-360
Description
Stress can have long term adverse effects on individuals' physical and mental well-being. Changes in the speech production process is one of many physiological changes that happen during stress. Microphones, embedded in mobile phones and carried ubiquitously by people, provide the opportunity to continuously and non-invasively monitor stress in real-life situations. We propose StressSense for unobtrusively recognizing stress from human voice using smartphones. We investigate methods for adapting a one-size-fits-all stress model to individual speakers and scenarios. We demonstrate that the StressSense classifier can robustly identify stress across multiple individuals in diverse acoustic environments: using model adaptation StressSense achieves 81% and 76% accuracy for indoor and outdoor environments, respectively. We show that StressSense can be implemented on commodity Android phones and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
H Lu, D Frauendorfer, M Rabbi, MS Mast… - Proceedings of the 2012 ACM conference on …, 2012