Journal: International Journal of Man-Machine Studies

Volume 59, Issue 1-2

1 -- 32Eva Hudlicka. To feel or not to feel: The role of affect in human-computer interaction
33 -- 53Michael D. McNeese. New visions of human-computer interaction: making affect compute
55 -- 64Rosalind W. Picard. Affective computing: challenges
65 -- 70Erik Hollnagel. Is affective computing an oxymoron?
71 -- 75Eva Hudlicka. Response: Is affective computing an oxymoron?
77 -- 80Michael D. McNeese. Response: Is affective computing an oxymoron?
81 -- 118Fiorella de Rosis, Catherine Pelachaud, Isabella Poggi, Valeria Carofiglio, Berardina De Carolis. From Greta s mind to her face: modelling the dynamics of affective states in a conversational embodied agent
119 -- 155Cynthia Breazeal. Emotion and sociable humanoid robots
157 -- 183Pierre-Yves Oudeyer. The production and recognition of emotions in speech: features and algorithms
185 -- 198Timo Partala, Veikko Surakka. Pupil size variation as an indication of affective processing
199 -- 212Robert D. Ward, Philip H. Marsden. Physiological responses to different WEB page designs
213 -- 225Antonio Camurri, Ingrid Lagerlöf, Gualtiero Volpe. Recognizing emotion from dance movement: comparison of spectator recognition and automated techniques
227 -- 235Ana Paiva, Marco Costa, Ricardo Chaves, Moisés Piedade, Dário Mourão, Daniel Sobral, Kristina Höök, Gerd Andersson, Adrian Bullock. SenToy: an affective sympathetic interface
237 -- 244Frederic Rick McKenzie, Mark W. Scerbo, Jean M. Catanzaro, Mark Phillips. Nonverbal indicators of malicious intent: affective components for interrogative virtual reality training
245 -- 255Christine L. Lisetti, Fatma Nasoz, Cynthia LeRouge, Onur Ozyer, Kaye Alvarez. Developing multimodal intelligent affective interfaces for tele-home health care