MultiMediate’22: Backchannel Detection and Agreement Estimation in Group Interactions
Philipp Müller, Dominik Schiller, Dominike Thomas, Michael Dietz, Hali Lindsay, Patrick Gebhard, Elisabeth André, Andreas Bulling
arXiv:2209.09578, pp. 1–6, 2022.
Abstract
Backchannels, i.e. short interjections of the listener, serve important meta-conversational purposes like signifying attention or indicating agreement. Despite their key role, automatic analysis of backchannels in group interactions has been largely neglected so far. The MultiMediate challenge addresses, for the first time, the tasks of backchannel detection and agreement estimation from backchannels in group conversations. This paper describes the MultiMediate challenge and presents a novel set of annotations consisting of 7234 backchannel instances for the MPIIGroupInteraction dataset. Each backchannel was additionally annotated with the extent by which it expresses agreement towards the current speaker. In addition to a an analysis of the collected annotations, we present baseline results for both challenge tasks.Links
doi: 10.48550/arXiv.2209.09578
Paper: mueller22_arxiv.pdf
Paper Access: http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.09578
BibTeX
@techreport{mueller22_arxiv,
title = {MultiMediate'22: Backchannel Detection and Agreement Estimation in Group Interactions},
author = {M{\"{u}}ller, Philipp and Schiller, Dominik and Thomas, Dominike and Dietz, Michael and Lindsay, Hali and Gebhard, Patrick and André, Elisabeth and Bulling, Andreas},
year = {2022},
pages = {1--6},
doi = {10.48550/arXiv.2209.09578},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2209.09578}
}