HCOct 19, 2023
Affective Conversational Agents: Understanding Expectations and Personal InfluencesJavier Hernandez, Jina Suh, Judith Amores et al.
The rise of AI conversational agents has broadened opportunities to enhance human capabilities across various domains. As these agents become more prevalent, it is crucial to investigate the impact of different affective abilities on their performance and user experience. In this study, we surveyed 745 respondents to understand the expectations and preferences regarding affective skills in various applications. Specifically, we assessed preferences concerning AI agents that can perceive, respond to, and simulate emotions across 32 distinct scenarios. Our results indicate a preference for scenarios that involve human interaction, emotional support, and creative tasks, with influences from factors such as emotional reappraisal and personality traits. Overall, the desired affective skills in AI agents depend largely on the application's context and nature, emphasizing the need for adaptability and context-awareness in the design of affective AI conversational agents.
HCJan 17, 2024
From User Surveys to Telemetry-Driven AI Agents: Exploring the Potential of Personalized Productivity SolutionsSubigya Nepal, Javier Hernandez, Talie Massachi et al.
Information workers increasingly struggle with productivity challenges in modern workplaces, facing difficulties in managing time and effectively utilizing workplace analytics data for behavioral improvement. Despite the availability of productivity metrics through enterprise tools, workers often fail to translate this data into actionable insights. We present a comprehensive, user-centric approach to address these challenges through AI-based productivity agents tailored to users' needs. Utilizing a two-phase method, we first conducted a survey with 363 participants, exploring various aspects of productivity, communication style, agent approach, personality traits, personalization, and privacy. Drawing on the survey insights, we developed a GPT-4 powered personalized productivity agent that utilizes telemetry data gathered via Viva Insights from information workers to provide tailored assistance. We compared its performance with alternative productivity-assistive tools, such as dashboard and narrative, in a study involving 40 participants. Our findings highlight the importance of user-centric design, adaptability, and the balance between personalization and privacy in AI-assisted productivity tools. By building on these insights, our work provides important guidance for developing more effective productivity solutions, ultimately leading to optimized efficiency and user experiences for information workers.
HCJan 28, 2021
AffectiveSpotlight: Facilitating the Communication of Affective Responses from Audience Members during Online PresentationsPrasanth Murali, Javier Hernandez, Daniel McDuff et al.
The ability to monitor audience reactions is critical when delivering presentations. However, current videoconferencing platforms offer limited solutions to support this. This work leverages recent advances in affect sensing to capture and facilitate communication of relevant audience signals. Using an exploratory survey (N = 175), we assessed the most relevant audience responses such as confusion, engagement, and head-nods. We then implemented AffectiveSpotlight, a Microsoft Teams bot that analyzes facial responses and head gestures of audience members and dynamically spotlights the most expressive ones. In a within-subjects study with 14 groups (N = 117), we observed that the system made presenters significantly more aware of their audience, speak for a longer period of time, and self-assess the quality of their talk more similarly to the audience members, compared to two control conditions (randomly-selected spotlight and default platform UI). We provide design recommendations for future affective interfaces for online presentations based on feedback from the study.
HCJul 23, 2019
Towards Understanding Emotional Intelligence for Behavior Change ChatbotsAsma Ghandeharioun, Daniel McDuff, Mary Czerwinski et al.
A natural conversational interface that allows longitudinal symptom tracking would be extremely valuable in health/wellness applications. However, the task of designing emotionally-aware agents for behavior change is still poorly understood. In this paper, we present the design and evaluation of an emotion-aware chatbot that conducts experience sampling in an empathetic manner. We evaluate it through a human-subject experiment with N=39 participants over the course of a week. Our results show that extraverts preferred the emotion-aware chatbot significantly more than introverts. Also, participants reported a higher percentage of positive mood reports when interacting with the empathetic bot. Finally, we provide guidelines for the design of emotion-aware chatbots for potential use in mHealth contexts.
HCMar 28, 2019
A Multimodal Emotion Sensing Platform for Building Emotion-Aware ApplicationsDaniel McDuff, Kael Rowan, Piali Choudhury et al.
Humans use a host of signals to infer the emotional state of others. In general, computer systems that leverage signals from multiple modalities will be more robust and accurate in the same task. We present a multimodal affect and context sensing platform. The system is composed of video, audio and application analysis pipelines that leverage ubiquitous sensors (camera and microphone) to log and broadcast emotion data in real-time. The platform is designed to enable easy prototyping of novel computer interfaces that sense, respond and adapt to human emotion. This paper describes the different audio, visual and application processing components and explains how the data is stored and/or broadcast for other applications to consume. We hope that this platform helps advance the state-of-the-art in affective computing by enabling development of novel human-computer interfaces.
HCDec 29, 2018
EMMA: An Emotion-Aware Wellbeing ChatbotAsma Ghandeharioun, Daniel McDuff, Mary Czerwinski et al.
The delivery of mental health interventions via ubiquitous devices has shown much promise. A conversational chatbot is a promising oracle for delivering appropriate just-in-time interventions. However, designing emotionally-aware agents, specially in this context, is under-explored. Furthermore, the feasibility of automating the delivery of just-in-time mHealth interventions via such an agent has not been fully studied. In this paper, we present the design and evaluation of EMMA (EMotion-Aware mHealth Agent) through a two-week long human-subject experiment with N=39 participants. EMMA provides emotionally appropriate micro-activities in an empathetic manner. We show that the system can be extended to detect a user's mood purely from smartphone sensor data. Our results show that our personalized machine learning model was perceived as likable via self-reports of emotion from users. Finally, we provide a set of guidelines for the design of emotion-aware bots for mHealth.