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RESEARCH PRODUCT
An Intra-Subject Approach Based on the Application of HMM to Predict Concentration in Educational Contexts from Nonintrusive Physiological Signals in Real-World Situations
Guillermo Chicote-hueteJesus G. BoticarioAna Serrano-mamolarMiguel Arevalillo-herráezsubject
IntrusivenessComputer scienceEmotionsControl (management)Student engagementContext (language use)02 engineering and technologyuser-centred systemsLearner modellinglcsh:Chemical technologyNonintrusiveMachine learningcomputer.software_genre01 natural sciencesBiochemistryArticleAnalytical ChemistryTask (project management)Heart RateUser-centred systems0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringHumanslcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringAffective computingHidden Markov modelaffective computingInstrumentationInformáticabusiness.industry010401 analytical chemistrynonintrusiveAffective computingComputer scienceAtomic and Molecular Physics and Opticsphysiological sensors0104 chemical scienceslearner modellingPhysiological sensors020201 artificial intelligence & image processingArtificial intelligenceState (computer science)Skin Temperaturebusinesscomputerdescription
Previous research has proven the strong influence of emotions on student engagement and motivation. Therefore, emotion recognition is becoming very relevant in educational scenarios, but there is no standard method for predicting students’ affects. However, physiological signals have been widely used in educational contexts. Some physiological signals have shown a high accuracy in detecting emotions because they reflect spontaneous affect-related information, which is fresh and does not require additional control or interpretation. Most proposed works use measuring equipment for which applicability in real-world scenarios is limited because of its high cost and intrusiveness. To tackle this problem, in this work, we analyse the feasibility of developing low-cost and nonintrusive devices to obtain a high detection accuracy from easy-to-capture signals. By using both inter-subject and intra-subject models, we present an experimental study that aims to explore the potential application of Hidden Markov Models (HMM) to predict the concentration state from 4 commonly used physiological signals, namely heart rate, breath rate, skin conductance and skin temperature. We also study the effect of combining these four signals and analyse their potential use in an educational context in terms of intrusiveness, cost and accuracy. The results show that a high accuracy can be achieved with three of the signals when using HMM-based intra-subject models. However, inter-subject models, which are meant to obtain subject-independent approaches for affect detection, fail at the same task.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-03-01 | Sensors |