CS547 Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design)
Fridays 12:50-2:05 · Gates B01 · Open to the public Previous | Next
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Jennifer Healey · MIT Media Lab
Sensible Computers: Technologies that Enable Computers to Understand Human Emotion October 27, 2000 There is a movement in computer science toward developing
systems that learn what their users want and that try to model
their user's interests and respond in a more adaptive way. Currently,
methods of modeling user preferences and frustrations involve
active non-social interactions, such as clicking on menus and
creating preference lists; however, the natural way people communicate
and respond to satisfaction or dissatisfaction is through affective
expression.
To appear socially intelligent, computers will have to develop
a model of their user's emotional state and respond to that state
appropriately. This affective intelligence becomes more important
as computers become more ubiquitous. A natural, social interaction
with a spreadsheet or programming task might seem superfluous,
but computers will soon be everywhere, in our homes, assisting
with cooking, heating, and room ambiance, in our cars, controlling
communication, navigation and music selection and even in our
clothing, extending our senses, jogging our memories in appropriate
contexts and perhaps broadcasting messages expressing our personality.
This talk will present novel systems for detecting emotional
state through physiological signals using wearable computers
and embedded systems with bio-sensors and cameras. These systems
were used in three experiments to detect emotion in an office
environment, an ambulatory environment and while driving a car.
Recognition results by the computer are comparable to those found
by a humans in similar experiments.
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