Abstract

Facial motion representation learning has become an exciting research topic, since biometric technologies are becoming more common in our daily lives. One of its applications is identity verification. After recording a dynamic facial motion video for enrollment, the user needs to show a matched facial appearance and make a facial motion the same as the enrollment for authentication. Some recent research papers have discussed the benefits of this new biometric technology and reported promising results for both static and dynamic facial motion verification tasks. Our work extends the existing approaches and introduces compound facial actions, which contain more than one dominant facial action in one utterance. We propose a new self-supervised pretraining method called contrastive subclips that improves the model performance with these more complex and secure facial motions. The experimental results show that the contrastive subclips method improves upon the baseline approaches, and the model performance for test data can reach 89.7% average precision.

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