Considerations for designing response quantification procedures in non-traditional psychophysiological applications

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Abstract

Psychophysiological assessment in the context of virtual environments is a promising means for benchmarking the efficacy and ecological validity of virtual reality scenarios. When applied to human-computer interaction, psychophysiological and affective computing approaches may increase facility for development of the next generation of human-computer systems. Such systems have the potential to use psychophysiological signals for user-feedback and adaptive responding. As the composition of investigating teams becomes diverse in keeping with interdisciplinary trends, there is a need to review de-facto standards of psychophysiological response quantification and arrive at consensus protocols adequately addressing the concerns of basic researchers and application developers. The current paper offers a demonstration of the ways in which such consensus scoring protocols may be derived. Electromyographic eye-blink scoring from an immersion investigation is used as an illustrative case study. © 2009 Springer.

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Iyer, A. V., Cosand, L. D., Courtney, C. G., Rizzo, A. A., & Parsons, T. D. (2009). Considerations for designing response quantification procedures in non-traditional psychophysiological applications. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 5638 LNAI, pp. 479–487). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-02812-0_56

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