PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

A computer system allows a machine to recognize a person's emotional state

A computer system allows a machine to recognize a person's emotional state
2011-11-22
(Press-News.org) The system created by these researchers can be used to automatically adapt the dialogue to the user's situation, so that the machine's response is adequate to the person's emotional state. "Thanks to this new development, the machine will be able to determine how the user feels (emotions) and how s/he intends to continue the dialogue (intentions)", explains one of its creators, David Grill, a professor in UC3M's Computer Science Department.

To detect the user's emotional state, the scientists focused on negative emotions that can make talking with an automatic system frustrating. Specifically, their work considered anger, boredom and doubt. To automatically detect these feelings, information regarding the tone of voice, the speed of speech, the duration of pauses, the energy of the voice signal and so on, up to a total of sixty different acoustic parameters, was used.

In addition, information regarding how the dialogue developed was used to adjust for the probability that the user was in one emotional state or another. For example, if the system did not correctly recognize what the interlocutor wanted to say several times, or if it asked the user to repeat information that s/he had already given, these factors could anger or bore the user when s/he was interacting with the system. Moreover, the authors of the study, which has been published in the Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, point out that it is important that the machine be able to predict how the rest of the dialogue is going to continue. "To that end, we have developed a statistical method that uses earlier dialogues to learn what actions the user is most likely to take at any given moment", the researchers highlight.

Once both emotion and intention have been detected, the scientists propose automatically adapting the dialogue to the situation the user is experiencing. For example, if s/he has doubts, more detailed help can be offered, whereas if s/he is bored, such an offer could be counterproductive. The authors defined the guidelines for obtaining this adaptation by carrying out an empirical evaluation with actual users; in this way they were able to demonstrate that an adaptable system works better in objective terms (for example, it produces shorter and more successful dialogues) and it was perceived as being more useful by the users.

This study was carried out by Professor David Grill Barres, of the Applied Artificial Intelligence Group of UC3M's Computer Science Department, together with Professors Zoraida Callejas Carrión and Ramón López-Cózar Delgado, of the Spoken and Multimodal Dialogue Group of the Computer Languages and Systems Department of the UGR. This achievement falls within the area of affective computation (computer systems that are capable of processing and/or responding to the user's emotions).



INFORMATION:

More information:

Study: Predicting user mental states in spoken dialogue systems
Authors: Z. Callejas, D. Grill, R. López-Cózar
Journal: EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing, 2011:6, pp. 1-23


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
A computer system allows a machine to recognize a person's emotional state

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Tallmadge Ohio Dentist Welcomes New Associate

2011-11-22
Gerald Sisko D.D.S., Inc. has been serving the families and surrounding communities of Tallmadge since 1992. Dr. Sisko recently welcomed a new associate, Dr. Joseph Landry, to his highly competent and friendly dental team to help expand an already flourishing practice. Dr. Sisko's Akron area dentist office continues to offer a variety of procedures to his patients, including: • Cosmetic • Crown and Bridges Procedures • Dentures & Partial Dentures • Extractions • Implant Restorations • Porcelain Veneers • Preventative Care • Root Canal Therapy • Teeth Whitening • Tooth ...

Ingredients involved in splashing revealed

2011-11-22
"Splashing" plays a central role in the transport of pollutants and the spread of diseases, but while the sight of a droplet striking and splashing off of a solid surface is a common experience, the actual physical ingredients and mechanisms involved in splashing aren't all that well understood. A team of Brown University and Harvard University researchers has discovered that there is indeed more involved in splashing than previously believed. They will discuss their findings at the upcoming American Physical Society's 64th Annual Division of Fluid Dynamics Meeting, which ...

Le Dimora and Jimmy Choo Host Holiday Event to Benefit Jammer Family Foundation

2011-11-22
A holiday Open House hosted by Le Dimora and Jimmy Choo will be held at the Le Dimora interior design boutique located at 16089 San Dieguito Road in Rancho Santa Fe (Del Rayo Village Shopping Center) on the evening of Thursday, December 1, 2011 from 6:00 pm to 8:30 pm to launch the Jimmy Choo Cruise 2012 Collection and raise funds for the Jammer Family Foundation. Guests will savor appetizers provided by Sushi on the Rock and sip champagne while shopping for shoes, handbags and interior decor items in a festive holiday atmosphere. A percentage of all sales from the event ...

Regeneration after a stroke requires intact communication channels between brain hemispheres

Regeneration after a stroke requires intact communication channels between brain hemispheres
2011-11-22
The structure of the corpus callosum, a thick band of nerve fibres that connects the two halves of the brain with each other and in this way enables the rapid exchange of information between the left and right hemispheres, plays an important role in the regaining of motor skills following a stroke. A study currently published in the journal Human Brain Mapping has shown that in stroke patients with particularly severely impaired hand movement, this communication channel between the two brain hemispheres in particular was badly damaged. In order to relate brain function ...

Rainfall suspected culprit in leaf disease transmission

2011-11-22
Rainfalls are suspected to trigger the spread of a multitude of foliar (leaf) diseases, which could be devastating for agriculture and forestry. Instead of focusing on the large-scale, ecological impact of this problem, researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge and the University of Liege in Belgium are studying the phenomenon from a novel perspective: that of a single rain droplet. "One may easily picture that a raindrop impacting a contaminated leaf grabs some of the pathogens there before being ejected and flying towards some healthy ...

Engineers devise shoe sampling system for detecting trace amounts of explosives

2011-11-22
The ability to efficiently and unobtrusively screen for trace amounts of explosives on airline passengers could improve travel safety – without invoking the ire of inconvenienced fliers. Toward that end, mechanical engineer and fluid dynamicist Matthew Staymates of the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and colleagues have developed a prototype air sampling system that can quickly blow particles off the surfaces of shoes and suck them away for analysis. The NIST engineers developed several different versions of the system. "One particular ...

Broward SCORE Creates 2012 Workshop Calendar to Fit Smart Phones and Tablets

2011-11-22
Broward SCORE will launch in December special digital editions of its upcoming winter workshops for 2012 designed for smart phones and tablets. SCORE enlisted the expertise of Guni Bermudez of Reach MCS and Jeff Miller of Stallion Publishers, both based in Fort Lauderdale, to create the new platforms. The Broward chapter of SCORE, a resource partner with the SBA, tested its digital editions in the fall, working out the kinks and improving the user experience. These new digital editions allow the nonprofit's workshop catalog to be easily viewed on smart phones, and ...

Mechanism of wine swirling explained

2011-11-22
Wine drinkers know that swirling a good vintage around in a glass aerates the wine and releases its bouquet. Just how the process – known as "orbital shaking" – works, however, has been something of a mystery. Fluid dynamicists have long observed that orbital shaking generates a wave that propagates around the inner edge of the glass, churning the liquid as it travels. "The formation of this wave has probably been known since the introduction of glass or any other kind of cylindrical bowl, but what has been lacking is a description of the physics related to the mixing ...

Paleontologist describes large nest of juvenile dinosaurs, first of their genus ever found

2011-11-22
KINGSTON, R.I. – November 21, 2011 – A nest containing the fossilized remains of 15 juvenile Protoceratops andrewsi dinosaurs from Mongolia has been described by a University of Rhode Island paleontologist, revealing new information about postnatal development and parental care. It is the first nest of this genus ever found and the first indication that Protoceratops juveniles remained in the nest for an extended period. The findings were reported in the most recent issue of the Journal of Paleontology. David Fastovsky, URI professor of geosciences, said the bowl-shaped ...

Florida-Based Franchise Beats the 'Scramble' in Breakfast, Brunch and Lunch Category

2011-11-22
In the early '90s, a Department of Defense engineer at NASA assigned to work on the now defunct Super Conducting Super Collider project was sidetracked with a personal mission that had nothing to do with subatomic particles or electromagnetic fields. Instead, after federal budget cuts ended the project, Ron Green assigned himself an entirely new operation: hatching up the country's perfect breakfast, brunch and lunch restaurant concept. Mission accomplished. Today, Another Broken Egg Cafe cracks more than 900,000 eggs a week at its 18 bustling locations in seven states, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Research on past hurricanes aims to reduce future risk

UT Health San Antonio, UTSA researchers receive prestigious 2025 Hill Prizes for medicine and technology

Panorama of our nearest galactic neighbor unveils hundreds of millions of stars

A chain reaction: HIV vaccines can lead to antibodies against antibodies

Bacteria in polymers form cables that grow into living gels

Rotavirus protein NSP4 manipulates gastrointestinal disease severity

‘Ding-dong:’ A study finds specific neurons with an immune doorbell

A major advance in biology combines DNA and RNA and could revolutionize cancer treatments

Neutrophil elastase as a predictor of delivery in pregnant women with preterm labor

NIH to lead implementation of National Plan to End Parkinson’s Act

Growth of private equity and hospital consolidation in primary care and price implications

Online advertising of compounded glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists

Health care utilization and costs for older adults aging into Medicare after the affordable care act

Reading the genome and understanding evolution: Symbioses and gene transfer in leaf beetles

Brains of people with sickle cell disease appear older

Elena Belova and Yevgeny Raitses recognized for groundbreaking plasma physics research

SOX9 overexpression ameliorates metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis through activation of the AMPK pathway

Florescent probes illuminate cholesterol and Alzheimer’s research

Qigong significantly decreases chronic low back pain in US military veterans

New insights into pancreatic disease and diabetes

Effectiveness and safety of tenofovir amibufenamide in the treatment of chronic hepatitis B: A real-world, multicenter study

Higher costs limit attendance for life changing cardiac rehab

Over 500 patients receive diagnosis through genetic reanalysis

Brain changes in Huntington’s disease decades before diagnosis will guide future prevention trials

U of A astronomers capture unprecedented view of supermassive black hole in action

Astrophysicists reveal structure of 74 exocomet belts orbiting nearby stars in landmark survey

Textbooks need to be rewritten: RNA, not DNA, is the main cause of acute sunburn

Brits still associate working-class accents with criminal behavior – study warns of bias in the criminal justice system

What do you think ‘guilty’ sounds like? Scientists find accent stereotypes influence beliefs about who commits crimes

University of Calgary nursing study envisions child trauma treatment through a Marvel and DC lens

[Press-News.org] A computer system allows a machine to recognize a person's emotional state