As researchers who study human interactive behavior, where do the common representations fall short? In what cases are they sufficient? | |
What representations should be developed or borrowed to better represent human behavior or deal with the challenges of interacting naturally with a person? | |
What do we know (e.g. from the social, cognitive, and behavioral sciences) about the timing of human behavior that we are not currently using? Which aspects of human behavior or social interaction are likely to be highly dependent on time? | |
What kinds of experiments in human-machine interaction could serve as testbeds (or eventually benchmarks) for the study of the role of timing? |
Jonathan K. Alt and Stephen Lieberman Modeling of Virtual Environments and Simulations Institute Naval Postgraduate School Exploring the Implications of Time in Discrete Event Social Simulations |
Sonia Chernova and Cynthia Breazeal Massachussets Institute of Technology Learning Temporal Plans from Observation of Human Collaborative Behavior |
Bastian Hartmann, Ingo Schwab, and Norbert Link Institute of Applied Research University of Applied Sciences Karlsruhe Prototype Optimization for Temporarily and Spatially Distorted Time Series |
Guy Hoffman Georgia Tech Center for Music Technology Anticipation in Human-Robot Interaction |
Hatice Kose-Bagci, Frank Broz, Qiming Shen, Kerstin Dautenhahn, and Chrystopher L.Nehaniv As Time Goes by: Representing and Reasoning About Timing in Human-Robot Interaction Studies |
David V. Lu, Annamaria Pileggiy, Chris Wilson, and William D. Smart Washington University in St. Louis What Can Actors Teach Robots About Interaction? |
Julie A. Shah, Brian C. Williams, and Cynthia Breazeal Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dynamic Execution of Temporal Plans for Temporally Fluid Human-Robot Teaming |
H. Joe Steinhauer, Sook-Ling Chua, Hans W. Guesgen, and Stephen Marsland School of Engineering and Advanced Technology Massey University Utilising Temporal Information in Behaviour Recognition |
Pinar Wennerberg and Klaus Schulz Center for Language and Information Technology Ludwig-Maximillians-University, Munich An Ontology of Socio-cultural Time Expressions |
Frank Forster Adaptive Systems Research Group University of Hertfordshire Representations of Time in Symbol Grounding |
Ian Horswill, Karl Fua, and Andrew Ortony Northwestern University Conflict and hesitancy in virtual actors |
Javier Snaider, Ryan McCall, and Stan Franklin Computer Science Department & Institute for Intelligent Systems The University of Memphis The Immediate Present Train Model: Time Production and Representation for Cognitive Agents |
Hartmut Messerschmidt Center for Computing and Communication Technologies (TZI) Separating Moving Objects from Landmarks |
Eric M. Meisner and Selma Sabanovic Johns Hopkins University University of Indiana, Bloomington Grounding Communication Without Prior Structure |
Richard Veale and Matthias Scheutz Human-Robot Interaction Laboratory Indiana University Who needs time? Implicit time is sufficient for some HRI tasks |
Nonverbal communication | |
Rhythmic or musical interaction | |
Spoken dialogue | |
Social decision-making | |
User state modeling | |
Interaction kinesics |