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Hauptverfasser: Yang, Zhou, Yang, Yueyi
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.00670
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author Yang, Zhou
Yang, Yueyi
author_facet Yang, Zhou
Yang, Yueyi
contents Face-to-face speech comprehension is inherently multimodal, integrating acoustic signals with visible articulation, facial expression, head motion, and other socially relevant cues. While audiovisual speech systems typically focus on the mouth region as the primary visual source of linguistic information, affective facial expressions are often treated separately as emotion-recognition targets. This paper investigates whether upper-face affective information contributes to audiovisual sentence recognition beyond audio and mouth-region cues, particularly under acoustic degradation. Using the CREMA-D audiovisual emotional speech corpus, we train feature-based sentence classifiers under four cue conditions: audio only (A), audio plus mouth/lower-face features (A+M), audio plus upper-face features (A+U), and audio plus both mouth and upper-face features (A+M+U). Models are evaluated on clean audio and pink-noise conditions at +10 dB, +5 dB, and 0 dB SNR using actor-independent splits. Results show that mouth/lower-face features provide substantial robustness benefits under degraded audio. At 0 dB SNR, A+M improves accuracy over A by 0.0794, with an actor-bootstrap 95% confidence interval of [0.0296, 0.1298]. Upper-face affective cues exhibit a more nuanced effect. Although the direct accuracy gain of A+M+U over A+M is small, full-face models consistently improve calibration across SNR levels and outperform shuffled upper-face controls under noisy conditions. These findings suggest that affective facial information may support multimodal robustness and confidence estimation under acoustic uncertainty without directly encoding lexical content. More broadly, the study highlights the potential role of socially expressive facial cues in human-centered audiovisual interaction systems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2606_00670
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Beyond the Mouth: Upper-Face Affective Cues in Audiovisual Sentence Recognition under Acoustic Uncertainty
Yang, Zhou
Yang, Yueyi
Sound
Artificial Intelligence
Face-to-face speech comprehension is inherently multimodal, integrating acoustic signals with visible articulation, facial expression, head motion, and other socially relevant cues. While audiovisual speech systems typically focus on the mouth region as the primary visual source of linguistic information, affective facial expressions are often treated separately as emotion-recognition targets. This paper investigates whether upper-face affective information contributes to audiovisual sentence recognition beyond audio and mouth-region cues, particularly under acoustic degradation. Using the CREMA-D audiovisual emotional speech corpus, we train feature-based sentence classifiers under four cue conditions: audio only (A), audio plus mouth/lower-face features (A+M), audio plus upper-face features (A+U), and audio plus both mouth and upper-face features (A+M+U). Models are evaluated on clean audio and pink-noise conditions at +10 dB, +5 dB, and 0 dB SNR using actor-independent splits. Results show that mouth/lower-face features provide substantial robustness benefits under degraded audio. At 0 dB SNR, A+M improves accuracy over A by 0.0794, with an actor-bootstrap 95% confidence interval of [0.0296, 0.1298]. Upper-face affective cues exhibit a more nuanced effect. Although the direct accuracy gain of A+M+U over A+M is small, full-face models consistently improve calibration across SNR levels and outperform shuffled upper-face controls under noisy conditions. These findings suggest that affective facial information may support multimodal robustness and confidence estimation under acoustic uncertainty without directly encoding lexical content. More broadly, the study highlights the potential role of socially expressive facial cues in human-centered audiovisual interaction systems.
title Beyond the Mouth: Upper-Face Affective Cues in Audiovisual Sentence Recognition under Acoustic Uncertainty
topic Sound
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2606.00670