Yunquan Chen

2papers

2 Papers

78.1CVMay 16
iMiGUE-3K: A Large-Scale Benchmark for Micro-Gesture Analysis with Self-Supervised Learning

Chengyan Wang, Haoyu Chen, Hui Wei et al.

Emotion understanding is a fundamental challenge in affective computing and artificial intelligence. While existing approaches predominantly focus on facial expressions and speech, they often overlook the rich emotional cues conveyed through body language. Recently, micro-gestures (MGs), unintentional, subconscious movements driven by inner feelings, have attracted increasing attention as an alternative to other cues. However, there are no existing large-scale datasets supporting the pre-training of the MG foundation model. To advance MG research, we present a new benchmark for micro-gesture-based emotion understanding, featuring key contributions with a novel dataset (iMiGUE-3K) and a series of foundation models for different tasks. Using a model-based crowd-sourcing data collection strategy, we construct iMiGUE-3K, the largest MG dataset to date. It comprises video recordings from 332 distinct professional tennis players' public press interviews over the past seven years, totaling more than 3.4K long video clips and 37 million frames. The dataset includes 32 micro-gesture classes with rich descriptive annotations, making it the first large-scale, in-the-wild, video dataset for fine-grained gesture-based emotion analysis. Built on iMiGUE-3K, we propose MG-FMs, a discriminative foundation model for transferable gesture presentation learning. Based on the foundation model, we establish five comprehensive evaluation tasks: MG recognition (unsupervised, semi-supervised, supervised), MG retrieval, and MG emotion recognition. Our systematic evaluation of representative methods demonstrates that micro-gesture-based analysis significantly improves emotion understanding. We hope this work can provide comprehensive tools for MG analysis and set a solid foundation for future research in psychological diagnostics, affective computing, and advanced human-computer interaction.

16.1IVApr 24
MTT-Bench: Predicting Social Dominance in Mice via Multimodal Large Language Models

Yunquan Chen, Haoyu Chen

Understanding social dominance in animal behavior is critical for neuroscience and behavioral studies. In this work, we explore the capability of Multimodal Large Language Models(MLLMs) to analyze raw behavioral video of mice and predict their dominance hierarchy. We introduce MTT-Bench, a novel benchmark comprising annotated videos of pairwise mouse interactions for Mouse Tube Test analysis. Building on existing MLLM architectures, we fine-tune these models to perform zero-shot inference on unseen behavioral sequences, predicting social dominance without explicit labels during testing. Our framework demonstrates promising results, showing high agreement with tube test rankings. This work opens a new direction for applying foundation models to ethology and social behavior analysis, without the need to design domain-specific models.