Abstract
When recognizing emotions, subtle nuances in displays of emotion generate ambiguity or uncertainty in emotion perception. Emotion uncertainty has been previously interpreted as inter-rater disagreement among multiple annotators. In this paper, we consider a more common and challenging scenario: modeling emotion uncertainty when only single emotion labels are available. From a Bayesian perspective, we propose to use deep ensembles to capture uncertainty for multiple emotion descriptors, i.e., action units, discrete expression labels and continuous descriptors. We further apply iterative self-distillation. Iterative distillation over multiple generations significantly improves performance in both emotion recognition and uncertainty estimation. Our method generates single student models that provide accurate estimates of uncertainty for in-domain samples and a student ensemble that can detect out-of-domain samples. Our experiments on emotion recognition and uncertainty estimation using the Aff-wild2 dataset demonstrate that our algorithm gives more reliable uncertainty estimates than both Temperature Scaling and Monte Carol Dropout.
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