Computer determines pain by analysing somone’s face

  • Researchers believe the system will be useful in separating ‘real pain from fake’
  • People express pain differently, which makes it hard for doctors to gauge
  • The system is personalized by taking into account age, sex and complexion 
  • Researchers hope the system will one day be available as an app on phones
  • Past research suggests computer systems are 30% more effective than humans 

A computer is being developed that rates how much pain someone is in by detecting small changes to their facial expressions.

Such a system could help doctors determine how to treat patients and may save the prescription of painkillers. 

Study author Dr Jeffrey Cohn from the University of Pittsburgh, said: ‘These metrics might be useful in determining real pain from faked pain.’

People experience and express pain differently, which makes it difficult for doctors to gauge the extent patients are suffering based on self-reported scores.  

The researchers hope the system could one day be available as an app that doctors have on their smartphones.

A computer is being developed that rates how much pain someone is in (stock image)

IS YOUR BACK PAIN PSYCHOLOGICAL? SUFFERERS OVERESTIMATE THEIR DISCOMFORT 

Back pain may be psychological, new research suggests.

People over estimate their lower back discomfort, a study found.

Lead author Dr Tasha Stanton from the University of South Australia, said: ‘People with chronic back pain and stiffness overestimated how much force was being applied to their backs.

‘This suggests that feelings of stiffness are a protective response, likely to avoid movement.’

Lower back pain is a leading cause of global disability that affects around 9.4 per cent of the population. It becomes chronic in approximately 20 per cent of sufferers. 

How the system was created 

The researchers ‘trained’ a computer based on videos of people wincing and grimacing in pain. 

Each of the videos featured a person with shoulder pain who performed various movements before rating their discomfort.

This helped to create a system where subtle differences in facial expressions can be used to determine how much pain a person is feeling. 

Large movement around the nose and mouth is thought to be particularly indicative of pain. 

Could determine ‘real pain from faked pain’ 

The system was made more accurate by accounting for people’s age, sex and complexion.

Personalized approaches were found to be more reliable than one-size-fits-all. Age in particular is thought to influence people’s pain perceptions.

The researchers hope the system could one day be available as an app that doctors have on their smartphones.

Dr Cohn said: ‘These metrics might be useful in determining real pain from faked pain.’

Previous research by the University of California in San Diego revealed computer systems weed out ‘pain fakers’ 85 per cent of the time, whereas trained humans are only accurate in 55 per cent of cases. 

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