Electrocardiogram (ECG) has been widely used for emotion recognition. This paper presents a deep neural network based on convolutional layers and a transformer mechanism to detect stress using ECG signals. We perform leave-one-subject-out experiments on two publicly available datasets, WESAD and SWELL-KW, to evaluate our method. Our experiments show that the proposed model achieves strong results, comparable or better than the state-of-theart models for ECG-based stress detection on these two datasets. Moreover, our method is end-to-end, does not require handcrafted features, and can learn robust representations with only a few convolutional blocks and the transformer component.
CCS CONCEPTS• Computing methodologies → Neural networks; Machine learning.
We propose cross-modal attentive connections, a new dynamic and effective technique for multimodal representation learning from wearable data. Our solution can be integrated into any stage of the pipeline, i.e., after any convolutional layer or block, to create intermediate connections between individual streams responsible for processing each modality. Additionally, our method benefits from two properties. First, it can share information uni-directionally (from one modality to the other) or bi-directionally. Second, it can be integrated into multiple stages at the same time to further allow network gradients to be exchanged in several touch-points. We perform extensive experiments on three public multimodal wearable datasets, WE-SAD, SWELL-KW, and CASE, and demonstrate that our method can effectively regulate and share information between different modalities to learn better representations. Our experiments further demonstrate that once integrated into simple CNN-based multimodal solutions (2, 3, or 4 modalities), our method can result in superior or competitive performance to state-of-the-art and outperform a variety of baseline uni-modal and classical multimodal methods.
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