Title :
Human awareness viewed from natural language concept formation: Focusing on affective words related to facial expressions
Author_Institution :
Fac. of Inf. Technol., Fukuoka Inst. of Technol., Fukuoka, Japan
Abstract :
Mental Image Directed Semantic Theory (MIDST) has already shown that each physical event concept (e.g., “carry”, “separate”) in natural language is characterized by a so-called “event pattern”, abstract pattern formed by the constituents of its referents. Therefore, people are assumed significantly aware of the event pattern involved when they cognize or recognize a physical event discerned with the others. Such event patterns are modeled as so-called “loci in attribute spaces” in MIDST. This is also the case for mental event concepts (e.g., “love”, “sympathize”). For example, a 5-dimensional attribute space can be provided for human emotion. This paper describes an approach toward a human mentality, so called Kansei, in order to provide robots with a function to measure peoples´ emotions toward external things, focusing on human awareness in concept formation of affective words related to facial expressions of Buddhism statues.
Keywords :
emotion recognition; face recognition; human-robot interaction; natural languages; psychometric testing; 5-dimensional attribute space; Buddhism statue facial expressions; Kansei; MIDST; abstract pattern; event pattern; human awareness; human emotion; human mentality; loci in attribute spaces; mental image directed semantic theory; natural language concept formation; people emotion measurement; physical event concept; Brain modeling; Computational modeling; Conferences; Cybernetics; Pragmatics; Robots; Semantics; concept formation; emotion; natural language;
Conference_Titel :
Cybernetics (CYBCONF), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Lausanne
DOI :
10.1109/CYBConf.2013.6617440