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Emotion expression is a complex process involving dependencies based on time, speaker, context, mood, personality, and culture. Emotion classification algorithms designed for real-world application must be able to interpret the emotional content of an utterance or dialog given the modulations resulting from these and other dependencies. Algorithmic development often rests on the assumption that the input emotions are uniformly recognized by a pool of evaluators. However, this style of consistent prototypical emotion expression often does not exist outside of a laboratory environment. This paper presents methods for interpreting the emotional content of non-prototypical utterances. These methods include modeling across multiple time-scales and modeling interaction dynamics between interlocutors. This paper recommends classifying emotions based on emotional profiles, or soft-labels, of emotion expression rather than relying on just raw acoustic features or categorical hard labels. Emotion expression is both interactive and dynamic. Consequently, to accurately recognize emotional content, these aspects must be incorporated during algorithmic design to improve classification performance.
Mower et al. (Tue,) studied this question.