LEADER 00000cam a2201129 i 4500 001 862077482 003 OCoLC 005 20240129213017.0 006 m o d 007 cr mn||||||||| 008 131104t20142014flua ob 000 0 eng d 015 GBB7C2339|2bnb 016 7 018416356|2Uk 019 862826255|a868008080|a900547327|a1066051205|a1156371327 |a1192346180|a1240512965 020 9781466598263|q(electronic bk.) 020 1466598263|q(electronic bk.) 029 1 AU@|b000052245074 029 1 AU@|b000060474688 029 1 AU@|b000062491080 029 1 AU@|b000066531669 029 1 AU@|b000070346921 029 1 CHNEW|b000898925 029 1 DEBBG|bBV042490837 029 1 DEBSZ|b43150346X 029 1 DEBSZ|b434840165 029 1 DEBSZ|b456537481 029 1 GBVCP|b882844512 029 1 UKMGB|b018416356 029 1 AU@|b000068981624 035 (OCoLC)862077482|z(OCoLC)862826255|z(OCoLC)868008080 |z(OCoLC)900547327|z(OCoLC)1066051205|z(OCoLC)1156371327 |z(OCoLC)1192346180|z(OCoLC)1240512965 037 CL0500000535|bSafari Books Online 040 N$T|beng|erda|epn|cN$T|dIDEBK|dYDXCP|dOSU|dCRCPR|dOCLCQ |dOCLCF|dUMI|dCOO|dDEBBG|dLLB|dSTF|dVLB|dCDX|dEBLCP|dDEBSZ |dMOR|dOCLCA|dVGM|dOTZ|dOCLCQ|dUAB|dOCLCQ|dOCLCA|dOCLCQ |dCEF|dU3W|dOCLCQ|dNLE|dOCLCQ|dUKMGB|dWYU|dYDX|dTYFRS |dLEAUB|dOCLCQ|dUKAHL|dOCLCQ|dNLW|dOCLCQ|dVT2|dK6U|dOCLCO |dOCLCQ|dSFB|dOCLCQ|dOCLCO 049 INap 082 04 004.01/9 082 04 004.01/9|223 099 eBook O'Reilly for Public Libraries 245 00 Coverbal synchrony in human-machine interaction /|ceditors, Matej Rojc, Nick Campbell.|h[O'Reilly electronic resource] 264 1 Boca Raton :|bCRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group,|c[2014] 264 4 |c©20 264 4 |c©2014 300 1 online resource (xiv, 420 pages) :|billustrations (some color) 336 text|btxt|2rdacontent 337 computer|bc|2rdamedia 338 online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 504 Includes bibliographical references. 505 0 1. Speech technology and conversational activity in human- machine interaction / Nick Campbell -- 2. A framework for studying human multimodal communication / Jens Allwood -- 3. Giving computers personality? Personality in computers is in the eye of the user / Jörg Frommer, Dietmar Rösner, Julia Lange and Matthias Haase -- 4. Multi-modal classifier-fusion for the recognition of emotions / Martin Schels, Michael Glodek, Sascha Meudt, Stefan Scherer, Miriam Schmidt, Georg Layher, Stephan Tschechne, Tobias Brosch, David Hrabal, Steffen Walter, Harald C. Traue, Günther Palm, Heiko Neumann and Friedhelm Schwenker -- 5. A framework for emotions and dispositions in man-companion interaction / Harald C. Traue, Frank Ohl, André Brechmann, Friedhelm Schwenker, Henrik Kessler, Kerstin Limbrecht, Holger Hoffmann, Stefan Scherer, Michael Kotzyba, Andreas Scheck and Steffen Walter -- 6. French face-to-face interaction : repetition as a multimodal resource / Roxane Bertrand, Gaëlle Ferré and Mathilde Guardiola -- 7. The situated multimodal facets of human communication / Anna Esposito -- 8. From annotation to multimodal behavior / Kristiina Jokinen and Catherine Pelachaud 9. Co-speech gesture generation for embodied agents and its effects on user evaluation / Kirsten Bergmann -- 10. A survey of listener behavior and listener models for embodied conversational agents / Elisabetta Bevacqua -- 11. Human and virtual agent expressive gesture quality analysis and synthesis / Radoslaw Niewiadomski, Maurizio Mancini and Stefano Piana -- 12. A distributed architecture for real- time dialogue and on-task learning of efficient co- operative turn-taking / Gudny Ragna Jonsdottir and Kristinn R. Thórisson -- 13. TTS-driven synthetic behavior generation model for embodied conversational agents / Izidor Mlakar, Zdravko Kačič and Matej Rojc -- 14. Modeling human communication dynamics for virtual human / Louis-Philippe Morency, Ari Shapiro and Stacy Marsella -- 15. Multimodal fusion in human-agent dialogue / Elisabeth André, Jean-Claude Martin, Florian Lingenfelser and Johannes Wagner. 520 Embodied conversational agents (ECA) and speech-based human-machine interfaces can together represent more advanced and more natural human-machine interaction. Fusion of both topics is a challenging agenda in research and production spheres. The important goal of human- machine interfaces is to provide content or functionality in the form of a dialog resembling face-to-face conversations. All natural interfaces strive to exploit and use different communication strategies that provide additional meaning to the content, whether they are human- machine interfaces for controlling an application or d. 588 0 Print version record. 590 O'Reilly|bO'Reilly Online Learning: Academic/Public Library Edition 650 0 Human-computer interaction. 650 0 Speech processing systems. 650 0 Nonverbal communication. 650 0 Gesture. 650 0 Affect (Psychology)|xComputer simulation. 650 0 User interfaces (Computer systems) 650 6 Traitement automatique de la parole. 650 6 Communication non verbale. 650 6 Gestes. 650 6 Interfaces utilisateurs (Informatique) 650 7 gesture.|2aat 650 7 Affect (Psychology)|xComputer simulation|2fast 650 7 Gesture|2fast 650 7 Human-computer interaction|2fast 650 7 Nonverbal communication|2fast 650 7 Speech processing systems|2fast 650 7 User interfaces (Computer systems)|2fast 700 1 Rojc, Matej,|eeditor,|eauthor. 700 1 Campbell, Nick,|eeditor,|eauthor. 776 08 |iPrint version:|tCoverbal synchrony in human-machine interaction.|dBoca Raton : CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group, [2014]|z9781466598256|w(DLC) 2013023190 |w(OCoLC)826896375 856 40 |uhttps://ezproxy.naperville-lib.org/login?url=https:// learning.oreilly.com/library/view/~/9781466598256/?ar |zAvailable on O'Reilly for Public Libraries 938 Askews and Holts Library Services|bASKH|nAH24950764 938 Coutts Information Services|bCOUT|n26541511 938 EBL - Ebook Library|bEBLB|nEBL1398223 938 EBSCOhost|bEBSC|n656810 938 ProQuest MyiLibrary Digital eBook Collection|bIDEB |ncis26541511 938 Taylor & Francis|bTAFR|nCRC0KE23712PDF 938 Taylor & Francis|bTAFR|n9780429089053 938 YBP Library Services|bYANK|n15916786 938 YBP Library Services|bYANK|n10451367 994 92|bJFN