Contains presentation slides from a talk at the NIPS 2000 Affective Computing Workshop held in Breckenridge, Colorado, December 2, 2000. The talk begins with two caveats to facial expression researchers: the failure of shape constancy for facial expression perception, and cultural effects observed in our experiments. I propose that intentional HCI is an interesting domain for research on facial action, and that musical interaction is a promising area for affective computing researchers. The talk concluded with an announcement of the ACM CHI'01 workshop on New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME). Two files are included with this upload: - original powerpoint file with slides and presenter notes (ppt) - the slides and notes reformatte...
Considerable effort has been devoted to the automatic extraction of information about action of the ...
Facial affect (or emotion) recognition is a central issue for many VMC and naturalistic computing ap...
Emotions should play an important role in the design of interfaces because people interact with mac...
Facial expression recognition is a particularly interesting field of computer vision since it brings...
Recently there has been an increasing incentive from researchers in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI,...
There is a perceived controversy as to whether the cognitive representation of affect is better mode...
The human face is used in many aspects of verbaland non-verbal communication: speech, thefacial expr...
Contains slides from a talk given at ECAG'08 the Workshop on Facial and Bodily Expressions for Contr...
A thesis submitted to the University of London in partial fulfillment to the degree of Doctor of Phi...
In this work, we address an important domain of human computer interaction (HCI), which is effective...
This book provides an overview of state of the art research in Affective Computing. It presents new ...
Facial expression recognition is a process performed by humans or computers, which consists of: 1. L...
Facial expression of emotion (or "facial affect") is rapidly becoming an area of intense i...
The papers in this special section focus on commercial applications for affective computing. One of ...
Facial expression plays an important role in cognition of human emotions (Fasel, 2003 & Yeasin, ...
Considerable effort has been devoted to the automatic extraction of information about action of the ...
Facial affect (or emotion) recognition is a central issue for many VMC and naturalistic computing ap...
Emotions should play an important role in the design of interfaces because people interact with mac...
Facial expression recognition is a particularly interesting field of computer vision since it brings...
Recently there has been an increasing incentive from researchers in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI,...
There is a perceived controversy as to whether the cognitive representation of affect is better mode...
The human face is used in many aspects of verbaland non-verbal communication: speech, thefacial expr...
Contains slides from a talk given at ECAG'08 the Workshop on Facial and Bodily Expressions for Contr...
A thesis submitted to the University of London in partial fulfillment to the degree of Doctor of Phi...
In this work, we address an important domain of human computer interaction (HCI), which is effective...
This book provides an overview of state of the art research in Affective Computing. It presents new ...
Facial expression recognition is a process performed by humans or computers, which consists of: 1. L...
Facial expression of emotion (or "facial affect") is rapidly becoming an area of intense i...
The papers in this special section focus on commercial applications for affective computing. One of ...
Facial expression plays an important role in cognition of human emotions (Fasel, 2003 & Yeasin, ...
Considerable effort has been devoted to the automatic extraction of information about action of the ...
Facial affect (or emotion) recognition is a central issue for many VMC and naturalistic computing ap...
Emotions should play an important role in the design of interfaces because people interact with mac...