Invited Talks
Shuichi Nishio, Kenji Koyama, "A criterion of facial expression of laugh based on temporal difference of eye and mouth movement", In ATR Symposium on Face and Object Recognition '97, pp. 30, January, 1997.
BibTeX:
@InProceedings{Nishio96e,
  author = {Shuichi Nishio and Kenji Koyama},
  title = "A criterion of facial expression of laugh based on temporal difference of eye and mouth movement",
  booktitle = {ATR Symposium on Face and Object Recognition '97},
  pages = 30,
  month = jan,
  year = 1997,
}
Reviewed Conference Papers
Shuichi Nishio, Kenji Koyama, "The effects of timing and attention on impression of smiles", In Proc. 12th international conference on the study of humor, Osaka, Japan, July, 2000.
BibTeX:
@InProceedings{nishio2000-ISHS,
  author = {Shuichi Nishio and Kenji Koyama},
  title = "The effects of timing and attention on impression of smiles",
  booktitle = {Proc. 12th international conference on the study of humor},
  address = {Osaka, Japan},
  month = jul,
  year = 2000,
}
Shuichi Nishio, Kenji Koyama, Toru Nakamura, "Temporal Differences in Eye and Mouth Movements Classifying Facial Expressions of Smiles", In 3rd International Conference on Face & Gesture Recognition (FG '98), Nara, Japan, pp. 206-213, April, 1998.
Abstract: In our previous work (S. Nishio and K. Koyama, 1997), we examined the effect of temporal differences in eye and mouth movements on classifying facial expressions of smiles. The results showed that: (a) these differences significantly influence the classification; (b) when the mouth begins moving prior to the eyes, the expressions are taken as positive; (c) when the eyes move prior to the mouth, the expressions are taken as negative; and (d) when both movements begin simultaneously, the expressions are taken as social laughter. The above results were re-examined by increasing the number of participants. Additionally, we found that when the attention of an observer is drawn to the mouth, the rate of recognizing the facial expression of smile as positive significantly increases
BibTeX:
@inproceedings{Nishio1998-FG,
  author    = {Shuichi Nishio and
		Kenji Koyama and
		Toru Nakamura},
  title     = {Temporal Differences in Eye and Mouth Movements Classifying Facial Expressions of Smiles},
  year      = {1998},
  pages     = {206-213},
  booktitle     = {3rd International Conference on Face {\&} Gesture Recognition (FG '98)},
  month = apr,
  address = {Nara, Japan},
  doi = {10.1109/AFGR.1998.670950},
  url = {http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=670950},
  abstract = {In our previous work (S. Nishio and K. Koyama, 1997), we examined the effect of temporal differences in eye and mouth movements on classifying facial expressions of smiles. The results showed that: (a) these differences significantly influence the classification; (b) when the mouth begins moving prior to the eyes, the expressions are taken as positive; (c) when the eyes move prior to the mouth, the expressions are taken as negative; and (d) when both movements begin simultaneously, the expressions are taken as social laughter. The above results were re-examined by increasing the number of participants. Additionally, we found that when the attention of an observer is drawn to the mouth, the rate of recognizing the facial expression of smile as positive significantly increases},
}