|
| 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 |