DocumentCode :
1984796
Title :
Learning to recognize affective body postures
Author :
Berthouze, Nadia ; Fushimi, Tsuyoshi ; Hasegawa, Makoto ; Kleinsmith, Andrea ; Takenaka, Hayato ; Berthouze, Luc
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Software, Aizu Univ., Aizu Wakamatsu, Japan
fYear :
2003
fDate :
29-31 July 2003
Firstpage :
193
Lastpage :
198
Abstract :
Robots are assuming an increasingly important role in our society. They now become pets and help support children healing. In other words, they are now trying to entertain an active and affective communication with human agents. However, up to now, such systems have primarily relied on the human agents´ ability to empathize with the system. Changes in the behavior of the system could therefore result in changes of mood or behavior in the human partner. But current systems do not seem to react to users, or only in clearly pre-defined ways. In that sense, current systems miss the bi-directionality typical to human social interaction. Social interaction is characterized by a multi-channel communication, in which each actor captures and reacts to signals by the other actor. To this aim, a computer or a robot has to be able to capture and interpret signals sent by the human partner in order to achieve social interaction. One of the most important channels of communication is physical interaction. The body is used to interpret the affective state of an interlocutor. This paper describes experiments we carried out to study the importance of body language in affective communication. The results of the experiments led us to develop a system that can incrementally learn to recognize affective states from body postures.
Keywords :
computer animation; image recognition; learning (artificial intelligence); robots; affective body postures; affective communication; body language; healing; human agents; human partner; human social interaction; interlocutor; learning; multichannel communication; physical interaction; robot; Bidirectional control; Communication channels; Hospitals; Humans; Man machine systems; Mood; Neuroscience; Robots; Software; Tail;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computational Intelligence for Measurement Systems and Applications, 2003. CIMSA '03. 2003 IEEE International Symposium on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7783-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CIMSA.2003.1227226
Filename :
1227226
Link To Document :
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