Emergence of synchrony in an Adaptive Interaction Model
This work addresses the challenge of creating more natural and adaptive interactions in specific HCI domains like conversational and musical agents, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing concepts of adaptation and synchronization without claiming major breakthroughs.
The paper tackled the problem of enhancing interactive abilities in Human-Computer Interaction by developing an adaptive interaction model for Embodied Conversational Agents and Creative Musical Agents, aiming to make synchrony emerge from non-verbal dimensions to improve musical improvisation and agent interactions.
In a Human-Computer Interaction context, we aim to elaborate an adaptive and generic interaction model in two different use cases: Embodied Conversational Agents and Creative Musical Agents for musical improvisation. To reach this goal, we'll try to use the concepts of adaptation and synchronization to enhance the interactive abilities of our agents and guide the development of our interaction model, and will try to make synchrony emerge from non-verbal dimensions of interaction.