The Effect of Audio-Visual Smiles on Social Influence in a Cooperative Human Agent Interaction Task

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Abstract

Emotional expressivity is essential for human interactions, informing both perception and decision-making. Here, we examine whether creating an audio-visual emotional channel mismatch influences decision-making in a cooperative task with a virtual character. We created a virtual character that was either congruent in its emotional expression (smiling in the face and voice) or incongruent (smiling in only one channel). People (N = 98) evaluated the character in terms of valence and arousal in an online study; then, visitors in a museum played the "lunar survival task"with the character over three experiments (N = 597, 78, 101, respectively). Exploratory results suggest that multi-modal expressions are perceived, and reacted upon, differently than unimodal expressions, supporting previous theories of audio-visual integration.

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Torre, I., Carrigan, E., Domijan, K., McDonnell, R., & Harte, N. (2021). The Effect of Audio-Visual Smiles on Social Influence in a Cooperative Human Agent Interaction Task. ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction, 28(6). https://doi.org/10.1145/3469232

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