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Lukas Stappen

Lukas Stappen contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

7 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

The 2026 ACII Dyadic Conversations (DaiKon) Workshop & Challenge

The 2026 ACII Dyadic Conversations (ACII-DaiKon) Workshop & Challenge introduces a benchmark for modeling interpersonal affect and social dynamics in dyadic conversations. Although conversational affect modeling has advanced rapidly, most benchmarks remain speaker-centric and underrepresent coupled, time-evolving processes between partners, including directional influence, conversational timing coordination, and rapport development. To address this gap, ACII-DaiKon presents three coordinated sub-challenges built on a shared dataset: (1) directional interpersonal influence prediction, (2) turn-taking prediction (next-speaker and time-to-next-speech), and (3) rapport trajectory prediction across full interactions. The challenge is built on the Hume-DaiKon dataset, comprising 945 dyadic conversations (743.4 hours of audiovisual data) collected under naturalistic conditions across five languages. The benchmark supports multimodal modeling, temporal reasoning, and cross-context generalization through fixed train/validation/test splits, standardized metrics, and released baseline systems. Evaluation uses Concordance Correlation Coefficient (CCC), Pearson correlation, Macro-F1, and Mean Absolute Error (MAE) depending on the sub-challenge. Baseline experiments establish initial reference performance, with best test results of 0.40 CCC and 0.50 Pearson for influence prediction, 0.66 Macro-F1 and 1.50~s MAE for turn-taking, and 0.68 CCC and 0.70 Pearson for rapport trajectory modeling. These results indicate that while current methods capture coarse dyadic patterns, robust modeling of directional dependence and long-horizon interpersonal dynamics remains challenging. The workshop provides a shared platform for rigorous comparison and cross-disciplinary discussion on data validity, evaluation protocols, and culturally aware modeling for dyadic interaction.

preprint2022arXiv

A Summary of the ComParE COVID-19 Challenges

The COVID-19 pandemic has caused massive humanitarian and economic damage. Teams of scientists from a broad range of disciplines have searched for methods to help governments and communities combat the disease. One avenue from the machine learning field which has been explored is the prospect of a digital mass test which can detect COVID-19 from infected individuals' respiratory sounds. We present a summary of the results from the INTERSPEECH 2021 Computational Paralinguistics Challenges: COVID-19 Cough, (CCS) and COVID-19 Speech, (CSS).

preprint2022arXiv

Predicting Sex and Stroke Success -- Computer-aided Player Grunt Analysis in Tennis Matches

Professional athletes increasingly use automated analysis of meta- and signal data to improve their training and game performance. As in other related human-to-human research fields, signal data, in particular, contain important performance- and mood-specific indicators for automated analysis. In this paper, we introduce the novel data set SCORE! to investigate the performance of several features and machine learning paradigms in the prediction of the sex and immediate stroke success in tennis matches, based only on vocal expression through players' grunts. The data was gathered from YouTube, labelled under the exact same definition, and the audio processed for modelling. We extract several widely used basic, expert-knowledge, and deep acoustic features of the audio samples and evaluate their effectiveness in combination with various machine learning approaches. In a binary setting, the best system, using spectrograms and a Convolutional Recurrent Neural Network, achieves an unweighted average recall (UAR) of 84.0 % for the player sex prediction task, and 60.3 % predicting stroke success, based only on acoustic cues in players' grunts of both sexes. Further, we achieve a UAR of 58.3 %, and 61.3 %, when the models are exclusively trained on female or male grunts, respectively.

preprint2021arXiv

Domain Adaptation with Joint Learning for Generic, Optical Car Part Recognition and Detection Systems (Go-CaRD)

Systems for the automatic recognition and detection of automotive parts are crucial in several emerging research areas in the development of intelligent vehicles. They enable, for example, the detection and modelling of interactions between human and the vehicle. In this paper, we quantitatively and qualitatively explore the efficacy of deep learning architectures for the classification and localisation of 29 interior and exterior vehicle regions on three novel datasets. Furthermore, we experiment with joint and transfer learning approaches across datasets and point out potential applications of our systems. Our best network architecture achieves an F1 score of 93.67 % for recognition, while our best localisation approach utilising state-of-the-art backbone networks achieve a mAP of 63.01 % for detection. The MuSe-CAR-Part dataset, which is based on a large variety of human-car interactions in videos, the weights of the best models, and the code is publicly available to academic parties for benchmarking and future research.

preprint2021arXiv

The INTERSPEECH 2021 Computational Paralinguistics Challenge: COVID-19 Cough, COVID-19 Speech, Escalation & Primates

The INTERSPEECH 2021 Computational Paralinguistics Challenge addresses four different problems for the first time in a research competition under well-defined conditions: In the COVID-19 Cough and COVID-19 Speech Sub-Challenges, a binary classification on COVID-19 infection has to be made based on coughing sounds and speech; in the Escalation SubChallenge, a three-way assessment of the level of escalation in a dialogue is featured; and in the Primates Sub-Challenge, four species vs background need to be classified. We describe the Sub-Challenges, baseline feature extraction, and classifiers based on the 'usual' COMPARE and BoAW features as well as deep unsupervised representation learning using the AuDeep toolkit, and deep feature extraction from pre-trained CNNs using the Deep Spectrum toolkit; in addition, we add deep end-to-end sequential modelling, and partially linguistic analysis.

preprint2020arXiv

Cross-lingual Zero- and Few-shot Hate Speech Detection Utilising Frozen Transformer Language Models and AXEL

Detecting hate speech, especially in low-resource languages, is a non-trivial challenge. To tackle this, we developed a tailored architecture based on frozen, pre-trained Transformers to examine cross-lingual zero-shot and few-shot learning, in addition to uni-lingual learning, on the HatEval challenge data set. With our novel attention-based classification block AXEL, we demonstrate highly competitive results on the English and Spanish subsets. We also re-sample the English subset, enabling additional, meaningful comparisons in the future.

preprint2020arXiv

MuSe 2020 -- The First International Multimodal Sentiment Analysis in Real-life Media Challenge and Workshop

Multimodal Sentiment Analysis in Real-life Media (MuSe) 2020 is a Challenge-based Workshop focusing on the tasks of sentiment recognition, as well as emotion-target engagement and trustworthiness detection by means of more comprehensively integrating the audio-visual and language modalities. The purpose of MuSe 2020 is to bring together communities from different disciplines; mainly, the audio-visual emotion recognition community (signal-based), and the sentiment analysis community (symbol-based). We present three distinct sub-challenges: MuSe-Wild, which focuses on continuous emotion (arousal and valence) prediction; MuSe-Topic, in which participants recognise domain-specific topics as the target of 3-class (low, medium, high) emotions; and MuSe-Trust, in which the novel aspect of trustworthiness is to be predicted. In this paper, we provide detailed information on MuSe-CaR, the first of its kind in-the-wild database, which is utilised for the challenge, as well as the state-of-the-art features and modelling approaches applied. For each sub-challenge, a competitive baseline for participants is set; namely, on test we report for MuSe-Wild a combined (valence and arousal) CCC of .2568, for MuSe-Topic a score (computed as 0.34$\cdot$ UAR + 0.66$\cdot$F1) of 76.78 % on the 10-class topic and 40.64 % on the 3-class emotion prediction, and for MuSe-Trust a CCC of .4359.