Abstract

Alcohol intoxication is a significant phenomenon, affecting many social areas, including work procedures or car driving. Alcohol causes certain side effects including changing the facial thermal distribution, which may enable the contactless identification and classification of alcohol-intoxicated people. We adopted a multiregional segmentation procedure to identify and classify symmetrical facial features, which reliably reflects the facial-temperature variations while subjects are drinking alcohol. Such a model can objectively track alcohol intoxication in the form of a facial temperature map. In our paper, we propose the segmentation model based on the clustering algorithm, which is driven by the modified version of the Artificial Bee Colony (ABC) evolutionary optimization with the goal of facial temperature features extraction from the IR (infrared radiation) images. This model allows for a definition of symmetric clusters, identifying facial temperature structures corresponding with intoxication. The ABC algorithm serves as an optimization process for an optimal cluster’s distribution to the clustering method the best approximate individual areas linked with gradual alcohol intoxication. In our analysis, we analyzed a set of twenty volunteers, who had IR images taken to reflect the process of alcohol intoxication. The proposed method was represented by multiregional segmentation, allowing for classification of the individual spatial temperature areas into segmentation classes. The proposed method, besides single IR image modelling, allows for dynamical tracking of the alcohol-temperature features within a process of intoxication, from the sober state up to the maximum observed intoxication level.

Highlights

  • Alcohol, in particular ethanol, is one of the most significantly consumed drugs worldwide

  • After all the measurements were done, the data from the IR camera were exported in the mat format, which is readable in the software MATLAB, in which we develop all the algorithms of the IR image processing

  • Modeling of alcohol intoxication is done in all twenty volunteers, while we report, three cases for different segmentation settings

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Summary

Introduction

In particular ethanol, is one of the most significantly consumed drugs worldwide. As far as we know, alcohol significantly contributes to the total number of hospital admissions and deaths, mainly including those due to car accidents and overdose [1,2]. The molecule which is responsible for alcohol intoxication is the ethanol (C2 H6 O). Present in all alcoholic beverages, ethanol reaches the blood vessel system through normal digestion. Recognized as a toxin, ethanol is destroyed by the body; mainly in the liver, as it filters blood [1,2,3,4].

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