The system could improve the way people interact with computers and perhaps allow disabled people to use computer-based communications devices, such as voice synthesisers, more effectively.
Karthigayan Muthukaruppan from Manipal International University in Selangor, Malaysia, and colleagues have developed a system using a genetic algorithm that gets better with each iteration to match irregular ellipse fitting equations to the shape of the human mouth displaying different emotions.
They have used photos of individuals from South-East Asia and Japan to train a computer to recognise the six commonly accepted human emotions -- happiness, sadness, fear, angry, disgust, surprise --
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