Conference Proceedings

Faces of Focus: A Study on the Facial Cues of Attentional States

Ebrahim Babaei, Namrata Srivastava, Joshua Newn, Qiushi Zhou, Tilman Dingler, Eduardo Velloso

Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems | ACM | Published : 2020

Abstract

Automatically detecting attentional states is a prerequisite for designing interventions to manage attention - knowledge workers' most critical resource. As a first step towards this goal, it is necessary to understand how different attentional states are made discernible through visible cues in knowledge workers. In this paper, we demonstrate the important facial cues to detect attentional states by evaluating a data set of 15 participants that we tracked over a whole workday, which included their challenge and engagement levels. Our evaluation shows that gaze, pitch, and lips part action units are indicators of engaged work; while pitch, gaze movements, gaze angle, and upper-lid raiser act..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

Dr Eduardo Velloso is the recipient of an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (Project Number: DE180100315) funded by the Australian Government. Ebrahim Babaei and Namrata Srivastava are both recipients of the Melbourne Research Scholarship. Joshua Newn and Qiushi Zhou are both supported by scholarships under the Australian Commonwealth Government Research Training Program.