The detection of stress at early stages is beneficial to both individuals and communities. However, traditional stress detection methods that use physiological signals are contact-based and require sensors to be in contact with test subjects for measurement. In this paper, we present a method to detect psychological stress in a non-contact manner using a human physiological response. In particular, we utilize a hyperspectral imaging (HSI) technique to extract the tissue oxygen saturation (StO2) value as a physiological feature for stress detection. Our experimental results indicate that this new feature may be independent from perspiration and ambient temperature. Trier Social Stress Tests (TSSTs) on 21 volunteers demonstrated a significant difference (p < 0.005 ) and a large practical discrimination (d = 1.37) between normalized baseline and stress StO2 levels. The accuracy for stress recognition from baseline using a binary classifier was 76.19 and 88.1 percent for the automatic and manual selections of the classifier threshold, respectively. These results suggest that the StO2 level could serve as a new modality to recognize stress at standoff distances.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, T., Yuen, P., Richardson, M., Liu, G., & She, Z. (2014). Detection of psychological stress using a hyperspectral imaging technique. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing, 5(4), 391–405. https://doi.org/10.1109/TAFFC.2014.2362513
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