New Program Measures Pain through Facial Expressions

Representational image. (Reuters)
Representational image. (Reuters)
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New Program Measures Pain through Facial Expressions

Representational image. (Reuters)
Representational image. (Reuters)

A new computer program that rates how much pain someone is in just by looking at their face could help doctors decide how to treat patients.

Jeffrey Cohn at the University of Pittsburgh in the US explained that these metrics might be useful in determining real pain from faked pain, which means that the system could make the difference between prescribing potentially addictive painkillers.

The US website “New Scientist” quoted Dianbo Liu, who created the system with his colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, as saying that objectively measuring pain levels is a tricky task.

People experience and express pain differently, so a doctor’s estimate of a patient’s pain can often differ from a self-reported pain score, he added.

In an attempt to introduce some objectivity, Liu and his team trained an algorithm on videos of people wincing and grimacing in pain. Each video consisted of a person with shoulder pain, who had been asked to perform a different movement and then rate their pain levels.

Liu said certain parts of the face are particularly revealing, noting that large amounts of movement around the nose and mouth tended to suggest higher self-reported pain scores.

The result was an algorithm that can use subtle differences in facial expressions to inform a guess about how a given person is feeling. To help make it more accurate, Liu’s system can be tweaked to take into account someone’s age, sex and skin complexion.

A study from the University of California in San Diego meanwhile found that a computer system could weed out fakers 85 percent of the time, whereas trained humans were only accurate 55 percent of the time.

However, Liu asserted that the system could never be a replacement for real doctors, and noted that he is planning to further train the algorithm with more videos of people in pain to see if that boosts its pain-rating abilities.



Croatia's Scientists Seek to Ward Off Threat to Posidonia Seagrass

Salema porgy swim near seagrass in the protected area of France's Porquerolles National Park ahead of the UN Ocean Conference on Friday, June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag)
Salema porgy swim near seagrass in the protected area of France's Porquerolles National Park ahead of the UN Ocean Conference on Friday, June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag)
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Croatia's Scientists Seek to Ward Off Threat to Posidonia Seagrass

Salema porgy swim near seagrass in the protected area of France's Porquerolles National Park ahead of the UN Ocean Conference on Friday, June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag)
Salema porgy swim near seagrass in the protected area of France's Porquerolles National Park ahead of the UN Ocean Conference on Friday, June 6, 2025. (AP Photo/Annika Hammerschlag)

At Croatia’s Dugi Otok island in the Adriatic Sea, scientists, demanding action to protect environmentally important meadows of seagrass, have been on a diving mission to assess the damage inflicted by human activity.

Named after Poseidon, the ancient Greek god of the sea, Posidonia oceanica, commonly known as Mediterranean tapeweed, provides food and shelter for fish, protects coasts from erosion, purifies sea water and can play a vital role in helping to tackle global warming.

A meadow of Posidonia can annually soak up to 15 times more carbon dioxide than a similar sized piece of the Amazon rainforest, scientific research has found.

But the scientists say much more needs to be done to protect it from tourist anchoring and from trawlers dragging fishing nets in the waters of the Adriatic Sea off Dugi Otok and the surrounding Kornati archipelago national park.

They have urged tougher regulations and fines for anyone breaching them.

Dominik Mihaljevic, a biologist at the national park, said the park had begun to install anchorages that would not harm the seagrass.

"Our ultimate goal is to completely prohibit anchoring at the 19 anchorage locations that are currently in use," Reuters quoted him as saying.

Matea Spika, a senior associate at Croatia’s Sunce environmental protection association, told Reuters Mediterranean Posidonia, endemic to the Mediterranean Sea, had declined by 30% in the last 30-to-40 years.

Apart from the issue of anchors and fishing nets, she said chemicals, excess nutrients from farms and cities, warmer waters due to climate change, and invasive species had caused further damage.

New ports and artificial beaches have also blocked sunlight essential for Posidonia’s growth.