During human-human interaction, emotion plays a vital role in structuring dialogue. Emotional content drives features such as topic shift, lexicalisation change and timing; it affects the delicate balance between goals related to the task at hand and those of social interaction; and it represents one type of feedback on the effect that utterances are having. These various facets are so central to most real-world interaction, that it is reasonable to suppose that emotion should also play an important role in human-computer interaction. To that end, techniques for detecting, modelling, and responding appropriately to emotion are explored, and an architecture for bringing these techniques together into a coherent system is presented.
CITATION STYLE
Gilbert, M. A., & Bench-Capon, T. J. M. (2001). E-motion: Moving Toward the Utilization of Artificial Emotion. Informal Logic, 22(3). https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v22i3.2593
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