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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dede, Ezgi, Agilonu, Kamile Asli, Akleman, Ergun, Sezgin, Metin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.18013
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author Dede, Ezgi
Agilonu, Kamile Asli
Akleman, Ergun
Sezgin, Metin
author_facet Dede, Ezgi
Agilonu, Kamile Asli
Akleman, Ergun
Sezgin, Metin
contents In this study, we introduce a sketch-based method for testing how subtle expressive cues influence the perception of affect in illustrations of human figures. We specifically study the impact of human posture and gaze direction, implicitly specified through nose orientation, on perceived emotions and mood. Through a series of user studies using sketchy illustrations of a running figure, where a professional illustrator manipulated gaze direction through adjustments on the nose orientation, we found that this simple change resulted in a diverse range of perceived affects, spanning from fear to concern and wonder. These findings shed light on the importance of fine details in defining context for context-aware system designs and underscore the importance of recognizing and expressing affect. Understanding minor expressive cues is crucial to developing emotionally intelligent systems capable of expressing affect.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_18013
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle On The Power of Subtle Expressive Cues in the Perception of Human Affects
Dede, Ezgi
Agilonu, Kamile Asli
Akleman, Ergun
Sezgin, Metin
Human-Computer Interaction
In this study, we introduce a sketch-based method for testing how subtle expressive cues influence the perception of affect in illustrations of human figures. We specifically study the impact of human posture and gaze direction, implicitly specified through nose orientation, on perceived emotions and mood. Through a series of user studies using sketchy illustrations of a running figure, where a professional illustrator manipulated gaze direction through adjustments on the nose orientation, we found that this simple change resulted in a diverse range of perceived affects, spanning from fear to concern and wonder. These findings shed light on the importance of fine details in defining context for context-aware system designs and underscore the importance of recognizing and expressing affect. Understanding minor expressive cues is crucial to developing emotionally intelligent systems capable of expressing affect.
title On The Power of Subtle Expressive Cues in the Perception of Human Affects
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.18013