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Affect and Emotion in
Human-Computer Interaction


Now published
by Springer in the LNCS Hot Topics series (LNCS 4868)



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Front Matter     Preface     Table of Contents

Description at Springer   Content at SpringerLink




Motivation
It's now ten years since the first publication of Rosalind Picard's book on Affective Computing. Since then, research in affect and emotion in HCI has evolved from an eccentric hobby of some visionary scientists to an accepted discipline within HCI research.
The field has developed a body of work that requires some aggregation and reflection, and is poised to make some potentially dramatic advances. The aim of this book is to provide a summary of the field and then present the latest research results and technology developments, and of the visions, hopes, and concerns related to this novel technology.


Content of the book

Theoretical Considerations

R. Beale & C. Peter

The Role of Affect and Emotion in Human-Computer Interaction

L. Palen & S. Bodker

Don't Get Emotional!

W. S. Bainbridge

Computational Affective Sociology

A. Lichtenstein, A. Oehme, S. Kupschick & T. Jürgensohn

Comparing Two Emotion Models for Deriving Affective States from Physiological Data

S. Mahlke & M. Minge

Consideration of Multiple Components of Emotions in Human-Technology Interaction

A. Tajadura & D. Västfjäll

Auditory-Induced Emotion: A Neglected Channel for Communication in Human- Computer Interaction

Sensing Emotions

T. Vogt, E. Andre & J. Wagner

Automatic Recognition of Emotions from Speech: a Review of the Literature and Recommendations for Practical Realisation

G. Castellano, L. Kessous & G. Caridakis

Emotion recognition through multiple modalities: face, body gesture, speech

G. McIntyre & R. Göcke

The Composite Sensing of Affect

User Experience and Design

Y. Lim, J Donaldson, H. Jung, B. Kunz, D. Royer, S. Ramalingam, S. Thirumaran & E. Stolterman

Emotional Experience and Interaction Design

S. Walker & D. Prytherch

How is it for you? (A case for recognising user motivation in the design process)

T. Porat & N. Tractinsky

Affect as a Mediator between Web-Store Design and Consumers’ Attitudes towards the Store

S. Harbich & M. Hassenzahl

Beyond Task Completion in the Workplace: Execute, Engage, Evolve, Expand

C. P. Creed & R. Beale

Simulated Emotion in Affective Embodied Agents

Affective Applications

C. Jones & A. Deeming

Affective Human-Robotic Interaction

N. Millard & L. Hole

In the Moodie: Using ‘Affective Widgets’ to Help Contact Centre Advisors Fight Stress

A. Money & H. Agius

Feasibility of Personalized Affective Video Summaries

C. Jones & J. Sutherland

Acoustic Emotion Recognition for Affective Computer Gaming

J. Loviscach & D. Oswald

In the Mood: Tagging Music with Affects

C. Jones & I.-M. Jonsson

Using Paralinguistic Cues in Speech to Recognise Emotions in Older Car Drivers



Editors

Christian Peter, Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Russell Beale,   University of Birmingham, UK


Scientific committee
Elisabeth André         Augsburg University, Germany
Ruth Aylett,               Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh, UK
Nick Campbell,        ATR, Japan
Lola Cañamero,        University of Hertfordshire, UK
Pabini Gabriel-Petit,  Spirit Softworks, US
Roland Göcke,          Seeing Machines & Australian National University, Australia
Kristina Höök,          KTH/SICS, Sweeden
Nicola Millard,          British Telecom plc, UK
Ana Paiva,                Instituto Superior Técnico, Purtugal
Karina Oertel,           Fraunhofer IGD Rostock, Germany
Marc Schröder,        DFKI, Germany
Jianhua Tao,             Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
John Waterworth,     Umeå University, Sweden
Robert Ward,           University of Huddersfield, UK
Ian Wilson,               neon.AI, Japan







maintained by Christian Peter