| C. Breazeal, P. Fitzpatrick, That certain look: Social amplification of animate vision, in: Proceedings of the AAAI Fall Symposium on Society of Intelligence Agents---The Human in the Loop, 2000. |
....however, some work has begun to focus on implementation issues, such as in [35] Nakata et al. 113] state that humans have a strong tendency to be cued by motion. In particular, they refer to analysis of dance that shows humans are emotionally affected by body movement. Breazeal and Fitzpatrick [21] contend humans perceive all motor actions to be semantically rich, whether or not they were intended to be. For example, gaze and body direction is generally interpreted as indicating locus of attention. Mizoguchi et al. 110] discuss the use of gestures and movements, similar to ballet poses, ....
....may need to mimic the way human perception works. For example, the human ocular motor system is based on foveate vision, uses saccadic eye movements, and exhibits specific visual behaviors (e.g. glancing) Thus, to be readily understood, a robot may need to have similar visual motor control [18,21,25]. 2.7.1. Types of perception Most human oriented perception is based on passive sensing, typically computer vision and spoken language recognition. Passive sensors, such as CCD cameras, are cheap, require minimal infrastructure, and can be used for a wide range of perception tasks ....
C. Breazeal, P. Fitzpatrick, That certain look: Social amplification of animate vision, in: Proceedings of the AAAI Fall Symposium on Society of Intelligence Agents---The Human in the Loop, 2000.
....humans have a strong ten12 dency to be cued by motion[114] In particular, they refer to analysis of dance that shows humans are emotionally a#ected by body movement. Breazeal and Fitzpatrick contend humans perceive all motor actions to be semantically rich, whether or not they were intended to be[22]. For example, gaze and body direction is generally interpreted as indicating locus of attention. Mizoguchi et al. discuss the use of gestures and movements, similar to ballet poses, to show emotion through movement[112] Schee# et al. describe the design of smooth, natural motions for ....
....may need to mimic the way human perception works. For example, the human ocular motor system is based on foveate vision, uses saccadic eye movements, and exhibits specific visual behaviors (e.g. glancing) Thus, to be readily understood, a robot may need to have 14 similar visual motor control[22,26,19]. Types of perception Most human oriented perception is based on passive sensing, typically computer vision and spoken language recognition. Passive sensors, such as CCD cameras, are cheap, require minimal infrastructure, and can be used for a wide range of perception tasks[119] 37] 2] and ....
C. Breazeal and P. Fitzpatrick, That certain look: social amplification of animate vision, in: Proc. AAAI Fall Symp. Soc. Intel. Agents--The Human in the Loop, 2000.
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