4 research outputs found

    Laugh machine

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    The Laugh Machine project aims at endowing virtual agents with the capability to laugh naturally, at the right moment and with the correct intensity, when interacting with human participants. In this report we present the technical development and evaluation of such an agent in one specific scenario: watching TV along with a participant. The agent must be able to react to both, the video and the participant’s behaviour. A full processing chain has been implemented, inte- grating components to sense the human behaviours, decide when and how to laugh and, finally, synthesize audiovisual laughter animations. The system was evaluated in its capability to enhance the affective experience of naive participants, with the help of pre and post-experiment questionnaires. Three interaction conditions have been compared: laughter-enabled or not, reacting to the participant’s behaviour or not. Preliminary results (the number of experiments is currently to small to obtain statistically significant differences) show that the interactive, laughter-enabled agent is positively perceived and is increasing the emotional dimension of the experiment

    Laugh When You’re Winning

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    Developing virtual characters with naturalistic game playing capabilities is an increasingly researched topic in Human-Computer Interaction. Possible roles for such characters include virtual teachers, personal care assistants, and companions for children. Laughter is an under-investigated emotional expression both in Human-Human and Human-Computer Interaction. The EU Project ILHAIRE, aims to study this phenomena and endow machines with laughter detection and synthesis capabilities. The Laugh when you're winning project, developed during the eNTERFACE 2013 Workshop in Lisbon, Portugal, aimed to set up and test a game scenario involving two human participants and one such virtual character. The game chosen, the yes/no game, induces natural verbal and non-verbal interaction between participants, including frequent hilarious events, e.g., one of the participants saying "yes" or "no" and so losing the game. The setup includes software platforms, developed by the ILHAIRE partners, allowing automatic analysis and fusion of human participants' multimodal data (voice, facial expression, body movements, respiration) in real-time to detect laughter. Further, virtual characters endowed with multimodal skills were synthesised in order to interact with the participants by producing laughter in a natural way
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