BIAS: A Body-based Interpretable Active Speaker Approach

Abstract

State-of-the-art Active Speaker Detection (ASD) approaches heavily rely on audio and facial features to perform, which is not a sustainable approach in wild scenarios. Although these methods achieve good results in the standard AVA-ActiveSpeaker set, a recent wilder ASD dataset (WASD) showed the limitations of such models and raised the need for new approaches. As such, we propose BIAS, a model that, for the first time, combines audio, face, and body information, to accurately predict active speakers in varying/challenging conditions. Additionally, we design BIAS to provide interpretability by proposing a novel use for Squeeze-and-Excitation blocks, namely in attention heatmaps creation and feature importance assessment. For a full interpretability setup, we annotate an ASD-related actions dataset (ASD-Text) to finetune a ViT-GPT2 for text scene description to complement BIAS interpretability. The results show that BIAS is state-of-the-art in challenging conditions where body-based features are of utmost importance (Columbia, open-settings, and WASD), and yields competitive results in AVA-ActiveSpeaker, where face is more influential than body for ASD. BIAS interpretability also shows the features/aspects more relevant towards ASD prediction in varying settings, making it a strong baseline for further developments in interpretable ASD models, and is available at https://github.com/Tiago-Roxo/BIAS.

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