Frontiers in Neuroinformatics (Oct 2024)

Can micro-expressions be used as a biomarker for autism spectrum disorder?

  • Mindi Ruan,
  • Na Zhang,
  • Xiangxu Yu,
  • Wenqi Li,
  • Chuanbo Hu,
  • Paula J. Webster,
  • Lynn K. Paul,
  • Shuo Wang,
  • Xin Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fninf.2024.1435091
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18

Abstract

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IntroductionEarly and accurate diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is crucial for effective intervention, yet it remains a significant challenge due to its complexity and variability. Micro-expressions are rapid, involuntary facial movements indicative of underlying emotional states. It is unknown whether micro-expression can serve as a valid bio-marker for ASD diagnosis.MethodsThis study introduces a novel machine-learning (ML) framework that advances ASD diagnostics by focusing on facial micro-expressions. We applied cutting-edge algorithms to detect and analyze these micro-expressions from video data, aiming to identify distinctive patterns that could differentiate individuals with ASD from typically developing peers. Our computational approach included three key components: (1) micro-expression spotting using Shallow Optical Flow Three-stream CNN (SOFTNet), (2) feature extraction via Micron-BERT, and (3) classification with majority voting of three competing models (MLP, SVM, and ResNet).ResultsDespite the sophisticated methodology, the ML framework's ability to reliably identify ASD-specific patterns was limited by the quality of video data. This limitation raised concerns about the efficacy of using micro-expressions for ASD diagnostics and pointed to the necessity for enhanced video data quality.DiscussionOur research has provided a cautious evaluation of micro-expression diagnostic value, underscoring the need for advancements in behavioral imaging and multimodal AI technology to leverage the full capabilities of ML in an ASD-specific clinical context.

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