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Main Authors: Kim, Hanseob, Han, Bin, Kim, Jieun, Syawaludin, Muhammad Firdaus, Kim, Gerard Jounghyun, Hwang, Jae-In
Format: Preprint
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.10385
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author Kim, Hanseob
Han, Bin
Kim, Jieun
Syawaludin, Muhammad Firdaus
Kim, Gerard Jounghyun
Hwang, Jae-In
author_facet Kim, Hanseob
Han, Bin
Kim, Jieun
Syawaludin, Muhammad Firdaus
Kim, Gerard Jounghyun
Hwang, Jae-In
contents This study investigates how different virtual agent (VA) behaviors influence subjects' perceptions and group decision-making. Participants carried out experimental group discussions with a VA exhibiting varying levels of engagement and affective behavior. Engagement refers to the VA's focus on the group task, whereas affective behavior reflects the VA's emotional state. The findings revealed that VA's engagements effectively captured participants' attention even in the group setting and enhanced group synergy, thereby facilitating more in-depth discussion and producing better consensus. On the other hand, VA's affective behavior negatively affected the perceived social presence and trustworthiness. Consequently, in the context of group discussion, participants preferred the engaged and non-affective VA to the non-engaged and affective VA. The study provides valuable insights for improving the VA's behavioral design as a team member for collaborative tasks.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2308_10385
institution arXiv
publishDate 2023
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Engaged and Affective Virtual Agents: Their Impact on Social Presence, Trustworthiness, and Decision-Making in the Group Discussion
Kim, Hanseob
Han, Bin
Kim, Jieun
Syawaludin, Muhammad Firdaus
Kim, Gerard Jounghyun
Hwang, Jae-In
Human-Computer Interaction
This study investigates how different virtual agent (VA) behaviors influence subjects' perceptions and group decision-making. Participants carried out experimental group discussions with a VA exhibiting varying levels of engagement and affective behavior. Engagement refers to the VA's focus on the group task, whereas affective behavior reflects the VA's emotional state. The findings revealed that VA's engagements effectively captured participants' attention even in the group setting and enhanced group synergy, thereby facilitating more in-depth discussion and producing better consensus. On the other hand, VA's affective behavior negatively affected the perceived social presence and trustworthiness. Consequently, in the context of group discussion, participants preferred the engaged and non-affective VA to the non-engaged and affective VA. The study provides valuable insights for improving the VA's behavioral design as a team member for collaborative tasks.
title Engaged and Affective Virtual Agents: Their Impact on Social Presence, Trustworthiness, and Decision-Making in the Group Discussion
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2308.10385