Research

Paper

TESTING March 18, 2026

Facial Movement Dynamics Reveal Workload During Complex Multitasking

Authors

Carter Sale, Melissa N. Stolar, Gaurav Patil, Michael J. Gostelow, Julia Wallier, Margaret C. Macpherson, Jan-Louis Kruger, Mark Dras, Simon G. Hosking, Rachel W. Kallen, Michael J. Richardson

Abstract

Real-time cognitive workload monitoring is crucial in safety-critical environments, yet established measures are intrusive, expensive, or lack temporal resolution. We tested whether facial movement dynamics from a standard webcam could provide a low-cost alternative. Seventy-two participants completed a multitasking simulation (OpenMATB) under varied load while facial keypoints were tracked via OpenPose. Linear kinematics (velocity, acceleration, displacement) and recurrence quantification features were extracted. Increasing load altered dynamics across timescales: movement magnitudes rose, temporal organisation fragmented then reorganised into complex patterns, and eye-head coordination weakened. Random forest classifiers trained on pose kinematics outperformed task performance metrics (85% vs. 55% accuracy) but generalised poorly across participants (43% vs. 33% chance). Participant-specific models reached 50% accuracy with minimal calibration (2 minutes per condition), improving continuously to 73% without plateau. Facial movement dynamics sensitively track workload with brief calibration, enabling adaptive interfaces using commodity cameras, though individual differences limit cross-participant generalisation.

Metadata

arXiv ID: 2603.17767
Provider: ARXIV
Primary Category: cs.HC
Published: 2026-03-18
Fetched: 2026-03-19 06:01

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Raw Data (Debug)
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