Timothy R. Brick

B.S. & M.S. Computer Science and Engineering
B.A. Psychology

Curriculum Vitae

About Me

I am Tim Brick, currently a Ph.D. candidate in the Quantitative and Cognitive Psychology programs at the The University of Virginia. I'm currently working in the Human Dynamics Laboratory under Dr. Steven M. Boker. I originally received bachelor's degrees in Computer Science and in Psychology from the University of Notre Dame, and then later received my Master's in Computer Science and Engineering from the same school. And this page is intended to fill you in about who I am and what I do, including my teaching and research.

Research Projects

Separation of Speech and Affect

Have you ever come across a photo of yourself where the expression on your face is something completely awkward and strange--like you couldn't possibly have ever made that expression yourself? I have. What's happening is that there are speech movements and expression movements that are mapped over top of each other. I think that in conversation or in watching video, we filter the faster speech movements out of the slower emotional expressions, so we never see the combination, really. But in a still frame, you can't see the speeds of things, so you can't separate them. My dissertation is focused on a technique for separating emotional expression and speech movements from facial movement data. I'm not interested in cleaning up pictures, of course. I'm interested in being able to analyze (and classify) emotion separately in conversational video. But it might help with the picture thing, too.

Parallax and Videoconference

One of the problems with videoconference is that it feels like the person is far away. And part of the reason the person feels far away is because they don't do things like make and break eye contact right. Also, when you move around in the environment, everything else around you shifts (for example, if you lean to the left, you'll see more of that side of your monitor). But the image on the screen doesn't. I'm working on a project to help fix both those things, to see what I can do to help make videoconference seem more natural.

We've put together a demo of the high-presence, low-bandwidth videoconference system that I presented in London this past Spring. The paper is also available. For this experiment, I'm collaborating with Dr. Steven Boker (my advisor) and Jeffrey R. Spies. The system is officially patent pending, thanks to the UVa Patent Foundation.

Automatic Classification and Generation of Facial Expression

As long as we're monkeying around with analyzing conversation, it seemed a waste not to give a shot at trying to classify facial expression. As it turns out, the estimation of facial expression benefits greatly from the addition of estimated information about the first and second derivatives (that is, the speed and acceleration of facial movements). I'll be presenting the first of the results from this line of research at ACII 2009. For this experiment, I'm collaborating with Dr. Steven Boker (my advisor), Jeffrey Cohn at Pittsburgh, and Michael D. Hunter here at UVa.

Our latest publication on this project was presented at the 2009 International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (ACII 2009) in Amsterdam.

OpenMx: Free Statistical Software

I'm the primary back-end developer on the OpenMx Project. The Mx statistical software, written by Michael Neale is a statistical package for doing Structural Equation Modeling. The OpenMx project is taking that software and making it Open Source, extensible, and generally trying to refit it for the next twenty year or so of statistics. I'm a member of the core development team, and working primarily on the C back-end.

Video-conference Manipulation

I'm interested in the way that people synchronize with each other in conversation. To that end, I'm involved in several research projects where participants are asked to participate in an unstructured videoconference conversation with someone they don't know. From there, we use image-processing technologies to measure the amount of synchronization and symmetry involved in the conversation.

The fun part about this is that we have the technology to modify the video stream in real time. We can change things like the apparent sex and apparent identity of the other participant. And the conversation can go on, with neither person realizing the modification is happening. I'm working on expanding this to include manipulation of affective movements like emotional expressions as well

For this experiment, I'm collaborating with Dr. Steven Boker (my advisor), Jeffrey Cohn at Pittsburgh, Barry-John Theobald at the University of East Anglia, Simon Lucey at Carnegie-Mellon University, and Jeffrey R. Spies and Michael D. Hunter here at UVa.

Synchronization in Dance

To test out some of the techniques we're using for the conversation studies, the lab first looked at Dance. Dance is like conversation, but much more predictable, since the semantic structure is easier, and the rhythm's more predictable. I've done some work on the influences of ambiguity on the dynamics of dance.

I also have some older projects. And some other research interests.

Teaching

I've taught in three different contexts, over the years: at the University of Notre Dame as an undergraduate TA, at Red Cloud Indian School as a Red Cloud Volunteer high school teacher, and at the University of Virginia as an Adjunct Professor.

Undergraduate TA

As an undergraduate, I was teaching assistant under Kathleen Eberhard for her Psycholinguistics course. There, I graded, held office hours, and ran review sessions.

High School Teacher

After graduation, I moved to The Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in Pine Ridge, South Dakota. There, I worked as a volunteer at Red Cloud Indian School. As a volunteer, my responsibilities included everything from grant writing and administration to library management to tech support to driving a regular bus run.

While I was there, I taught four classes: Digital Imaging, Digital Moviemaking, Basic Web Design, and Photojournalism. Funds for the required equipment were provided by the Teca Oyate Waonspekiya Americorps National Service Grant

Graduate Statistics Instructor

In graduate school, I was asked to teach PSYC 771, part one of the introductory graduate statistics sequence in the Department of Psychology. My co-teacher, Ryne Estabrook and I designed and implemented the curriculum, designed the labs, and taught the classes themselves.

Some examples of labs and presentation slides:
  • Aren't posted yet, but are available upon request.

Presentations and Talks

With a background in computer science, I tend to be one of the more tech-savvy graduate students, so I am sometimes called upon to give introductions to some technical tools. For example, I've given a short Introduction to LaTeX to a few folks here and there. There's also an (admittedly quite messy) page of LaTeX Resources for beginners. Feel free to use and abuse the presentations, code, and formats there, but please acknowledge the folks who made them (the Steve mentioned there is Dr. Steven M. Boker).

Grant Writing Experience

I had the opportunity to write a few grants while I was working at Red Cloud Indian School. Red Cloud is an excellent cause, but I'm proud to say that the grants I've had a hand in writing have raised over a million dollars in funding, mostly to help make sure the kids out there had some access to computing equipment and training. The details of the individual grants are below, for those who speak grant-ese.

Beaumont Foundation of America Educational Institution Pilot Grant

Funded by Beaumont Foundation of America. August 2003--May 2004; Grant in kind: $45,000 Equipment Total Costs. Role: Grant Co-author (with Matthew Ehlman); Grant Administrator.

Teca Oyate Waonspekiya Americorps National Service Grant

Funded by Corporation for National Public Service. December 2003-November 2006; $633,000 Total Costs. Role: Grant Co-author (with Thomas Merkel, S.J.); Negotiator for final funding allocation; Interim Administrator.

Wakanyeja kin Wokiye Owicakiyapi 21st Century Learning Center

Funded by South Dakota Department of Education and Cultural Affairs; January 2004--December 2009; $600,000 Total Costs. Role: Grant Author.