CVAug 14, 2018

Looking Beyond a Clever Narrative: Visual Context and Attention are Primary Drivers of Affect in Video Advertisements

arXiv:1808.04610v115 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the need for better automatic ad affect recognition by identifying key visual drivers, offering insights for advertisers and marketers.

The study tackled the problem of understanding which visual elements drive emotion in video advertisements, finding that actively attended objects and coarse scene structure are more predictive of affect than individual objects or background elements.

Emotion evoked by an advertisement plays a key role in influencing brand recall and eventual consumer choices. Automatic ad affect recognition has several useful applications. However, the use of content-based feature representations does not give insights into how affect is modulated by aspects such as the ad scene setting, salient object attributes and their interactions. Neither do such approaches inform us on how humans prioritize visual information for ad understanding. Our work addresses these lacunae by decomposing video content into detected objects, coarse scene structure, object statistics and actively attended objects identified via eye-gaze. We measure the importance of each of these information channels by systematically incorporating related information into ad affect prediction models. Contrary to the popular notion that ad affect hinges on the narrative and the clever use of linguistic and social cues, we find that actively attended objects and the coarse scene structure better encode affective information as compared to individual scene objects or conspicuous background elements.

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