04155oam 2200709I 450 991082208310332120170816135550.00-429-08905-81-4665-9825-510.1201/b15477 (CKB)2670000000394427(EBL)1398223(SSID)ssj0000911428(PQKBManifestationID)11500279(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000911428(PQKBWorkID)10992874(PQKB)10614114(MiAaPQ)EBC1398223(OCoLC)862077482(CaSebORM)9781466598256(EXLCZ)99267000000039442720180331h20142014 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrCoverbal synchrony in human-machine interaction /editors, Matej Rojc, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science University of Maribor, Slovenia and Nick Campbell, Stokes Professor, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin1st editionBoca Raton, FL :CRC Press,[2014]©20141 online resource (432 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4665-9826-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Preface; Contents; List of Contributors; CHAPTER 1: Speech Technology and Conversational Activity in Human-Machine Interaction; CHAPTER 2: A Framework for Studying Human Multimodal Communication; CHAPTER 3: Giving Computers Personality?Personality in Computers is in the Eye of the User; CHAPTER 4: Multi-Modal Classifier-Fusion for the Recognition of Emotions; CHAPTER 5: A Framework for Emotions and Dispositions in Man-Companion Interaction; CHAPTER 6: French Face-to-Face Interaction: Repetition as a Multimodal Resource; CHAPTER 7: The Situated Multimodal Facets of Human CommunicationCHAPTER 8: From Annotation to Multimodal BehaviorCHAPTER 9: Co-speech Gesture Generation for Embodied Agents and its Effects on User Evaluation; CHAPTER 10: A Survey of Listener Behavior and Listener Models for Embodied Conversational Agents; CHAPTER 11: Human and Virtual Agent Expressive Gesture Quality Analysis and Synthesis; CHAPTER 12: A Distributed Architecture for Real-time Dialogue and On-task Learning of Efficient Co-operative Turn-taking; CHAPTER 13: TTS-driven Synthetic Behavior Generation Model for Embodied Conversational AgentsCHAPTER 14: Modeling Human Communication Dynamics for Virtual HumanCHAPTER 15: Multimodal Fusion in Human-Agent Dialogue; Color Plate Section; Back CoverEmbodied conversational agents (ECA) and speech-based human-machine interfaces can together represent more advanced and more natural human-machine interaction. Fusion of both topics is a challenging agenda in research and production spheres. The important goal of human-machine interfaces is to provide content or functionality in the form of a dialog resembling face-to-face conversations. All natural interfaces strive to exploit and use different communication strategies that provide additional meaning to the content, whether they are human-machine interfaces for controlling an application oAffect (Psychology)Computer simulationGestureHuman-computer interactionNonverbal communicationSpeech processing systemsUser interfaces (Computer systems)Affect (Psychology)Computer simulation.Gesture.Human-computer interaction.Nonverbal communication.Speech processing systems.User interfaces (Computer systems)004.01/9004.019COM012000COM051240COM079010bisacshRojc MatejCampbell NickFlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910822083103321Coverbal synchrony in human-machine interaction3943520UNINA