Emotion-Oriented Systems : The Humaine Handbook / edited by Roddy Cowie, Catherine Pelachaud, Paolo Petta
Mitwirkende(r): Resource type: Ressourcentyp: Buch (Online)Buch (Online)Sprache: Englisch Reihen: Cognitive Technologies | SpringerLink BücherVerlag: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg, 2011Beschreibung: Online-Ressource (XXII, 792p, digital)ISBN:- 9783642151842
- 006.3
- 004.019 006.3
- Q334-342 TJ210.2-211.495
- QA76.9.H85
Inhalte:
Zusammenfassung: Emotion pervades human life in general, and human communication in particular, and this sets information technology a challenge. Traditionally, IT has focused on allowing people to accomplish practical tasks efficiently, setting emotion to one side. That was acceptable when technology was a small part of life, but as technology and life become increasingly interwoven we can no longer ask people to suspend their emotional nature and habits when they interact with technology. The European Commission funded a series of related research projects on emotion and computing, culminating in the HumainePPN: PPN: 1650779445Package identifier: Produktsigel: ZDB-2-SCS
Contents; Contributors; Introduction: History, HUMAINE and This Handbook; Part I: Theories and Models; Part II: Signals to Signs; Part III: Data and Databases; Part IV: Emotion in Interaction; Part V: Emotion in Cognition and Action; Part VI: Persuasion and Communication; Part VII: Usability; Part VIII: Ethics and Good Practice; References; Part I Theories and Models of Emotion; Editorial: Theories and Models of Emotion; 1 Scope of WP3 Theories and Models EmotionTheories of ; 2 Outreach Efforts; 2.1 The Proceedings of the First HUMAINE Workshop in Geneva
2.2 Definition of Concepts2.3 The GRID Study GRID study ; 2.4 Blueprint for Affective Computing: A Source Book (Oxford University Press, Series in Affective Science); 3 Conclusion; References; Emotion: Concepts and Definitions; 1 Introduction; 2 Platos Middle Ground; 2.1 Common Terms and Their Ambiguities; 2.2 Systematising Vocabulary/Emotion Terms; 2.3 Coda; 3 Describing Fragments of Emotional Life; 3.1 Units ; 3.2 Dimensions; 3.3 Feeling ; 3.4 Appraisal; 3.5 Emotional Colouring ; 3.6 Action Tendency; 3.7 Expression ; 3.8 Emotional Modes of Action and Cognition
3.9 Connectedness3.10 Impressions of Emotion ; 3.11 Category Labels ; 4 Classifying Emotion-Related States ; 4.1 Mindsets and Personal States; 4.2 Generic Emotion-Related States; 4.3 Specific Emotion Terms ; 5 Where Have All the Theories Gone?; 6 Conclusion; References; Emotions in Social Interactions: Unfolding Emotional Experience; 1 Introduction; 1.1 Emotions as Communication Tools; 1.2 Explicit and Implicit Responses to Emotions Emotion0Explicit response to Emotion0Implicit response to ; 2 Theoretical Explanations of Emotions as Ongoing Processes
2.1 Multicomponent Theory of Emotion2.2 Social Process Theory of Emotion and Continuous Process Model of Communication; 3 Regulating Processes in a Dynamic Emotional World; 3.1 Synchrony and Dissynchrony; 3.2 Imitation, Mimicry, and the Chameleon Effect Imitation Mimicry Chameleon effect ; 3.3 Emotional Contagion Emotional contagion ; 3.4 Video-Mediated Interactions; 4 Comparison Between Humans and Artificial Agents in Emotional Interactions Embodied Conversational Agent (ECA) ; 5 Conclusion; References
Biological and Computational Constraints to Psychological Modelling of Emotion1 From Psychology to Cognitive Neuroscience, to Modelling, and Back Cognitive science Cognitive revolution Modelling ; 2 Biologically Plausible Artificial Neural Networks to Test Models of Emotion Biologically plausible artificial neural networksee Neural network Neural network ; 3 Conclusion; References; Part II Signals to Signs; Editorial: Signals to Signs Feature Extraction, Recognition, and Multimodal Fusion; 1 Multimodality and Interaction
2 From Emotions to Social Signals and Contexts of Interaction
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