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Tran, Minh; Chang, Di; Siniukov, Maksim; Soleymani, Mohammad
Dyadic Interaction Modeling for Social Behavior Generation Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2403.09069 [cs]).
@misc{tran_dyadic_2024,
title = {Dyadic Interaction Modeling for Social Behavior Generation},
author = {Minh Tran and Di Chang and Maksim Siniukov and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2403.09069},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-03-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Human-human communication is like a delicate dance where listeners and speakers concurrently interact to maintain conversational dynamics. Hence, an effective model for generating listener nonverbal behaviors requires understanding the dyadic context and interaction. In this paper, we present an effective framework for creating 3D facial motions in dyadic interactions. Existing work consider a listener as a reactive agent with reflexive behaviors to the speaker's voice and facial motions. The heart of our framework is Dyadic Interaction Modeling (DIM), a pre-training approach that jointly models speakers' and listeners' motions through masking and contrastive learning to learn representations that capture the dyadic context. To enable the generation of non-deterministic behaviors, we encode both listener and speaker motions into discrete latent representations, through VQ-VAE. The pre-trained model is further fine-tuned for motion generation. Extensive experiments demonstrate the superiority of our framework in generating listener motions, establishing a new state-of-the-art according to the quantitative measures capturing the diversity and realism of generated motions. Qualitative results demonstrate the superior capabilities of the proposed approach in generating diverse and realistic expressions, eye blinks and head gestures.},
note = {arXiv:2403.09069 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Kwon, Deuksin; Weiss, Emily; Kulshrestha, Tara; Chawla, Kushal; Lucas, Gale M.; Gratch, Jonathan
Are LLMs Effective Negotiators? Systematic Evaluation of the Multifaceted Capabilities of LLMs in Negotiation Dialogues Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2402.13550 [cs]).
@misc{kwon_are_2024,
title = {Are LLMs Effective Negotiators? Systematic Evaluation of the Multifaceted Capabilities of LLMs in Negotiation Dialogues},
author = {Deuksin Kwon and Emily Weiss and Tara Kulshrestha and Kushal Chawla and Gale M. Lucas and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13550},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {A successful negotiation demands a deep comprehension of the conversation context, Theory-of-Mind (ToM) skills to infer the partner's motives, as well as strategic reasoning and effective communication, making it challenging for automated systems. Given the remarkable performance of LLMs across a variety of NLP tasks, in this work, we aim to understand how LLMs can advance different aspects of negotiation research, ranging from designing dialogue systems to providing pedagogical feedback and scaling up data collection practices. To this end, we devise a methodology to analyze the multifaceted capabilities of LLMs across diverse dialogue scenarios covering all the time stages of a typical negotiation interaction. Our analysis adds to the increasing evidence for the superiority of GPT-4 across various tasks while also providing insights into specific tasks that remain difficult for LLMs. For instance, the models correlate poorly with human players when making subjective assessments about the negotiation dialogues and often struggle to generate responses that are contextually appropriate as well as strategically advantageous.},
note = {arXiv:2402.13550 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Marti, Deniz; Hanrahan, David; Sanchez-Triana, Ernesto; Wells, Mona; Corra, Lilian; Hu, Howard; Breysse, Patrick N.; Laborde, Amalia; Caravanos, Jack; Bertollini, Roberto; Porterfield, Kate; Fuller, Richard
Structured Expert Judgement Approach of the Health Impact of Various Chemicals and Classes of Chemicals Technical Report
Public and Global Health 2024.
@techreport{marti_structured_2024,
title = {Structured Expert Judgement Approach of the Health Impact of Various Chemicals and Classes of Chemicals},
author = {Deniz Marti and David Hanrahan and Ernesto Sanchez-Triana and Mona Wells and Lilian Corra and Howard Hu and Patrick N. Breysse and Amalia Laborde and Jack Caravanos and Roberto Bertollini and Kate Porterfield and Richard Fuller},
url = {http://medrxiv.org/lookup/doi/10.1101/2024.01.30.24301863},
doi = {10.1101/2024.01.30.24301863},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
institution = {Public and Global Health},
abstract = {ABSTRACT
Introduction
Chemical contamination and pollution are an ongoing threat to human health and the environment. The concern over the consequences of chemical exposures at the global level continues to grow. Because resources are constrained, there is a need to prioritize interventions focused on the greatest health impact. Data, especially related to chemical exposures, are rarely available for most substances of concern, and alternate methods to evaluate their impact are needed.
Structured Expert Judgment (SEJ) Process
A Structured Expert Judgment
3
process was performed to provide plausible estimates of health impacts for 16 commonly found pollutants: asbestos, arsenic, benzene, chromium, cadmium, dioxins, fluoride, highly hazardous pesticides (HHPs), lead, mercury, polycyclic-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), Per- and Polyfluorinated Substances (PFAs), phthalates, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), and brominated flame retardants (BRFs). This process, undertaken by sector experts, weighed individual estimations of the probable global health scale health impacts of each pollutant using objective estimates of the expert opinions’ statistical accuracy and informativeness.
Main Findings
The foremost substances, in terms of mean projected annual total deaths, were lead, asbestos, arsenic, and HHPs. Lead surpasses the others by a large margin, with an estimated median value of 1.7 million deaths annually. The three other substances averaged between 136,000 and 274,000 deaths per year. Of the 12 other chemicals evaluated, none reached an estimated annual death count exceeding 100,000. These findings underscore the importance of prioritizing available resources on reducing and remediating the impacts of these key pollutants.
Range of Health Impacts
Based on the evidence available, experts concluded some of the more notorious chemical pollutants, such as PCBs and dioxin, do not result in high levels of human health impact from a global scale perspective. However, the chemical toxicity of some compounds released in recent decades, such as Endocrine Disrupters and PFAs, cannot be ignored, even if current impacts are limited. Moreover, the impact of some chemicals may be disproportionately large in some geographic areas. Continued research and monitoring are essential; and a preventative approach is needed for chemicals.
Future Directions
These results, and potential similar analyses of other chemicals, are provided as inputs to ongoing discussions about priority setting for global chemicals and pollution management. Furthermore, we suggest that this SEJ process be repeated periodically as new information becomes available.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {techreport}
}
Introduction
Chemical contamination and pollution are an ongoing threat to human health and the environment. The concern over the consequences of chemical exposures at the global level continues to grow. Because resources are constrained, there is a need to prioritize interventions focused on the greatest health impact. Data, especially related to chemical exposures, are rarely available for most substances of concern, and alternate methods to evaluate their impact are needed.
Structured Expert Judgment (SEJ) Process
A Structured Expert Judgment
3
process was performed to provide plausible estimates of health impacts for 16 commonly found pollutants: asbestos, arsenic, benzene, chromium, cadmium, dioxins, fluoride, highly hazardous pesticides (HHPs), lead, mercury, polycyclic-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), Per- and Polyfluorinated Substances (PFAs), phthalates, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), and brominated flame retardants (BRFs). This process, undertaken by sector experts, weighed individual estimations of the probable global health scale health impacts of each pollutant using objective estimates of the expert opinions’ statistical accuracy and informativeness.
Main Findings
The foremost substances, in terms of mean projected annual total deaths, were lead, asbestos, arsenic, and HHPs. Lead surpasses the others by a large margin, with an estimated median value of 1.7 million deaths annually. The three other substances averaged between 136,000 and 274,000 deaths per year. Of the 12 other chemicals evaluated, none reached an estimated annual death count exceeding 100,000. These findings underscore the importance of prioritizing available resources on reducing and remediating the impacts of these key pollutants.
Range of Health Impacts
Based on the evidence available, experts concluded some of the more notorious chemical pollutants, such as PCBs and dioxin, do not result in high levels of human health impact from a global scale perspective. However, the chemical toxicity of some compounds released in recent decades, such as Endocrine Disrupters and PFAs, cannot be ignored, even if current impacts are limited. Moreover, the impact of some chemicals may be disproportionately large in some geographic areas. Continued research and monitoring are essential; and a preventative approach is needed for chemicals.
Future Directions
These results, and potential similar analyses of other chemicals, are provided as inputs to ongoing discussions about priority setting for global chemicals and pollution management. Furthermore, we suggest that this SEJ process be repeated periodically as new information becomes available.
Yu, Zifan; Tavakoli, Erfan Bank; Chen, Meida; You, Suya; Rao, Raghuveer; Agarwal, Sanjeev; Ren, Fengbo
TokenMotion: Motion-Guided Vision Transformer for Video Camouflaged Object Detection Via Learnable Token Selection Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2311.02535 [cs]).
@misc{yu_tokenmotion_2024,
title = {TokenMotion: Motion-Guided Vision Transformer for Video Camouflaged Object Detection Via Learnable Token Selection},
author = {Zifan Yu and Erfan Bank Tavakoli and Meida Chen and Suya You and Raghuveer Rao and Sanjeev Agarwal and Fengbo Ren},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.02535},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {The area of Video Camouflaged Object Detection (VCOD) presents unique challenges in the field of computer vision due to texture similarities between target objects and their surroundings, as well as irregular motion patterns caused by both objects and camera movement. In this paper, we introduce TokenMotion (TMNet), which employs a transformer-based model to enhance VCOD by extracting motion-guided features using a learnable token selection. Evaluated on the challenging MoCA-Mask dataset, TMNet achieves state-of-the-art performance in VCOD. It outperforms the existing state-of-the-art method by a 12.8% improvement in weighted F-measure, an 8.4% enhancement in S-measure, and a 10.7% boost in mean IoU. The results demonstrate the benefits of utilizing motion-guided features via learnable token selection within a transformer-based framework to tackle the intricate task of VCOD.},
note = {arXiv:2311.02535 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Liu, Ziming; Suen, Christine Wun Ki; Zou, Zhengbo; Chen, Meida; Shi, Yangming
Assessing Workers’ Operational Postures via Egocentric Camera Mapping Proceedings Article
In: Computing in Civil Engineering 2023, pp. 17–24, American Society of Civil Engineers, Corvallis, Oregon, 2024, ISBN: 978-0-7844-8522-4.
@inproceedings{liu_assessing_2024,
title = {Assessing Workers’ Operational Postures via Egocentric Camera Mapping},
author = {Ziming Liu and Christine Wun Ki Suen and Zhengbo Zou and Meida Chen and Yangming Shi},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/9780784485224.003},
doi = {10.1061/9780784485224.003},
isbn = {978-0-7844-8522-4},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
booktitle = {Computing in Civil Engineering 2023},
pages = {17–24},
publisher = {American Society of Civil Engineers},
address = {Corvallis, Oregon},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Ustun, Volkan; Jorvekar, Ronit; Gurney, Nikolos; Pynadath, David; Wang, Yunzhe
Assessing Routing Decisions of Search and Rescue Teams in Service of an Artificial Social Intelligence Agent: Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence, pp. 313–320, SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, Rome, Italy, 2024, ISBN: 978-989-758-680-4.
@inproceedings{ustun_assessing_2024,
title = {Assessing Routing Decisions of Search and Rescue Teams in Service of an Artificial Social Intelligence Agent:},
author = {Volkan Ustun and Ronit Jorvekar and Nikolos Gurney and David Pynadath and Yunzhe Wang},
url = {https://www.scitepress.org/DigitalLibrary/Link.aspx?doi=10.5220/0012388100003636},
doi = {10.5220/0012388100003636},
isbn = {978-989-758-680-4},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence},
pages = {313–320},
publisher = {SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications},
address = {Rome, Italy},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Gurney, Nikolos; Morstatter, Fred; Pynadath, David V.; Russell, Adam; Satyukov, Gleb
Operational Collective Intelligence of Humans and Machines Journal Article
In: 2024, (Publisher: [object Object] Version Number: 1).
@article{gurney_operational_2024,
title = {Operational Collective Intelligence of Humans and Machines},
author = {Nikolos Gurney and Fred Morstatter and David V. Pynadath and Adam Russell and Gleb Satyukov},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13273},
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2402.13273},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
abstract = {We explore the use of aggregative crowdsourced forecasting (ACF) as a mechanism to help operationalize ``collective intelligence'' of human-machine teams for coordinated actions. We adopt the definition for Collective Intelligence as: ``A property of groups that emerges from synergies among data-information-knowledge, software-hardware, and individuals (those with new insights as well as recognized authorities) that enables just-in-time knowledge for better decisions than these three elements acting alone.'' Collective Intelligence emerges from new ways of connecting humans and AI to enable decision-advantage, in part by creating and leveraging additional sources of information that might otherwise not be included. Aggregative crowdsourced forecasting (ACF) is a recent key advancement towards Collective Intelligence wherein predictions (Xtextbackslash% probability that Y will happen) and rationales (why I believe it is this probability that X will happen) are elicited independently from a diverse crowd, aggregated, and then used to inform higher-level decision-making. This research asks whether ACF, as a key way to enable Operational Collective Intelligence, could be brought to bear on operational scenarios (i.e., sequences of events with defined agents, components, and interactions) and decision-making, and considers whether such a capability could provide novel operational capabilities to enable new forms of decision-advantage.},
note = {Publisher: [object Object]
Version Number: 1},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gurney, Nikolos; Pynadath, David V.; Ustun, Volkan
Spontaneous Theory of Mind for Artificial Intelligence Journal Article
In: 2024, (Publisher: [object Object] Version Number: 1).
@article{gurney_spontaneous_2024,
title = {Spontaneous Theory of Mind for Artificial Intelligence},
author = {Nikolos Gurney and David V. Pynadath and Volkan Ustun},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13272},
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2402.13272},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
abstract = {Existing approaches to Theory of Mind (ToM) in Artificial Intelligence (AI) overemphasize prompted, or cue-based, ToM, which may limit our collective ability to develop Artificial Social Intelligence (ASI). Drawing from research in computer science, cognitive science, and related disciplines, we contrast prompted ToM with what we call spontaneous ToM – reasoning about others' mental states that is grounded in unintentional, possibly uncontrollable cognitive functions. We argue for a principled approach to studying and developing AI ToM and suggest that a robust, or general, ASI will respond to prompts textbackslashtextitand spontaneously engage in social reasoning.},
note = {Publisher: [object Object]
Version Number: 1},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gratch, Jonathan; Greene, Gretchen; Picard, Rosalind; Urquhart, Lachlan; Valstar, Michel
Guest Editorial: Ethics in Affective Computing Journal Article
In: IEEE Trans. Affective Comput., vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 1–3, 2024, ISSN: 1949-3045, 2371-9850.
@article{gratch_guest_2024,
title = {Guest Editorial: Ethics in Affective Computing},
author = {Jonathan Gratch and Gretchen Greene and Rosalind Picard and Lachlan Urquhart and Michel Valstar},
url = {https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10454111/},
doi = {10.1109/TAFFC.2023.3322918},
issn = {1949-3045, 2371-9850},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
journal = {IEEE Trans. Affective Comput.},
volume = {15},
number = {1},
pages = {1–3},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Spiegel, Brennan M. R.; Rizzo, Albert; Persky, Susan; Liran, Omer; Wiederhold, Brenda; Woods, Susan; Donovan, Kate; Sarkar, Korak; Xiang, Henry; Joo, Sun; Jotwani, Rohan; Lang, Min; Paul, Margot; Senter-Zapata, Mike; Widmeier, Keith; Zhang, Haipeng
What Is Medical Extended Reality? A Taxonomy Defining the Current Breadth and Depth of an Evolving Field Journal Article
In: Journal of Medical Extended Reality, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 4–12, 2024, ISSN: 2994-1520.
@article{spiegel_what_2024,
title = {What Is Medical Extended Reality? A Taxonomy Defining the Current Breadth and Depth of an Evolving Field},
author = {Brennan M. R. Spiegel and Albert Rizzo and Susan Persky and Omer Liran and Brenda Wiederhold and Susan Woods and Kate Donovan and Korak Sarkar and Henry Xiang and Sun Joo and Rohan Jotwani and Min Lang and Margot Paul and Mike Senter-Zapata and Keith Widmeier and Haipeng Zhang},
url = {https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012},
doi = {10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012},
issn = {2994-1520},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-20},
journal = {Journal of Medical Extended Reality},
volume = {1},
number = {1},
pages = {4–12},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Awada, Mohamad; Gerber, Burcin Becerik; Lucas, Gale M.; Roll, Shawn C.
Stress appraisal in the workplace and its associations with productivity and mood: Insights from a multimodal machine learning analysis Journal Article
In: PLoS ONE, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. e0296468, 2024, ISSN: 1932-6203.
@article{awada_stress_2024,
title = {Stress appraisal in the workplace and its associations with productivity and mood: Insights from a multimodal machine learning analysis},
author = {Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik Gerber and Gale M. Lucas and Shawn C. Roll},
editor = {Iftikhar Ahmed Khan},
url = {https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0296468},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0296468},
issn = {1932-6203},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {PLoS ONE},
volume = {19},
number = {1},
pages = {e0296468},
abstract = {Previous studies have primarily focused on predicting stress arousal, encompassing physiological, behavioral, and psychological responses to stressors, while neglecting the examination of stress appraisal. Stress appraisal involves the cognitive evaluation of a situation as stressful or non-stressful, and as a threat/pressure or a challenge/opportunity. In this study, we investigated several research questions related to the association between states of stress appraisal (i.e., boredom, eustress, coexisting eustress-distress, distress) and various factors such as stress levels, mood, productivity, physiological and behavioral responses, as well as the most effective ML algorithms and data signals for predicting stress appraisal. The results support the Yerkes-Dodson law, showing that a moderate stress level is associated with increased productivity and positive mood, while low and high levels of stress are related to decreased productivity and negative mood, with distress overpowering eustress when they coexist. Changes in stress appraisal relative to physiological and behavioral features were examined through the lenses of stress arousal, activity engagement, and performance. An XGBOOST model achieved the best prediction accuracies of stress appraisal, reaching 82.78% when combining physiological and behavioral features and 79.55% using only the physiological dataset. The small accuracy difference of 3% indicates that physiological data alone may be adequate to accurately predict stress appraisal, and the feature importance results identified electrodermal activity, skin temperature, and blood volume pulse as the most useful physiologic features. Implementing these models within work environments can serve as a foundation for designing workplace policies, practices, and stress management strategies that prioritize the promotion of eustress while reducing distress and boredom. Such efforts can foster a supportive work environment to enhance employee well-being and productivity.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Jago, Arthur S.; Raveendhran, Roshni; Fast, Nathanael; Gratch, Jonathan
Algorithmic management diminishes status: An unintended consequence of using machines to perform social roles Journal Article
In: Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, vol. 110, pp. 104553, 2024, ISSN: 00221031.
@article{jago_algorithmic_2024,
title = {Algorithmic management diminishes status: An unintended consequence of using machines to perform social roles},
author = {Arthur S. Jago and Roshni Raveendhran and Nathanael Fast and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0022103123001105},
doi = {10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104553},
issn = {00221031},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {Journal of Experimental Social Psychology},
volume = {110},
pages = {104553},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Shi, Zhonghao; O'Connell, Allison; Li, Zongjian; Liu, Siqi; Ayissi, Jennifer; Hoffman, Guy; Soleymani, Mohammad; Matarić, Maja J.
Build Your Own Robot Friend: An Open-Source Learning Module for Accessible and Engaging AI Education Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2402.01647 [cs]).
@misc{shi_build_2024,
title = {Build Your Own Robot Friend: An Open-Source Learning Module for Accessible and Engaging AI Education},
author = {Zhonghao Shi and Allison O'Connell and Zongjian Li and Siqi Liu and Jennifer Ayissi and Guy Hoffman and Mohammad Soleymani and Maja J. Matarić},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.01647},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {As artificial intelligence (AI) is playing an increasingly important role in our society and global economy, AI education and literacy have become necessary components in college and K-12 education to prepare students for an AI-powered society. However, current AI curricula have not yet been made accessible and engaging enough for students and schools from all socio-economic backgrounds with different educational goals. In this work, we developed an open-source learning module for college and high school students, which allows students to build their own robot companion from the ground up. This open platform can be used to provide hands-on experience and introductory knowledge about various aspects of AI, including robotics, machine learning (ML), software engineering, and mechanical engineering. Because of the social and personal nature of a socially assistive robot companion, this module also puts a special emphasis on human-centered AI, enabling students to develop a better understanding of human-AI interaction and AI ethics through hands-on learning activities. With open-source documentation, assembling manuals and affordable materials, students from different socio-economic backgrounds can personalize their learning experience based on their individual educational goals. To evaluate the student-perceived quality of our module, we conducted a usability testing workshop with 15 college students recruited from a minority-serving institution. Our results indicate that our AI module is effective, easy-to-follow, and engaging, and it increases student interest in studying AI/ML and robotics in the future. We hope that this work will contribute toward accessible and engaging AI education in human-AI interaction for college and high school students.},
note = {arXiv:2402.01647 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Murawski, Alaine; Ramirez‐Zohfeld, Vanessa; Mell, Johnathan; Tschoe, Marianne; Schierer, Allison; Olvera, Charles; Brett, Jeanne; Gratch, Jonathan; Lindquist, Lee A.
Development and pilot testing of an artificial intelligence‐based family caregiver negotiation program Journal Article
In: J American Geriatrics Society, pp. jgs.18775, 2024, ISSN: 0002-8614, 1532-5415.
@article{murawski_development_2024,
title = {Development and pilot testing of an artificial intelligence‐based family caregiver negotiation program},
author = {Alaine Murawski and Vanessa Ramirez‐Zohfeld and Johnathan Mell and Marianne Tschoe and Allison Schierer and Charles Olvera and Jeanne Brett and Jonathan Gratch and Lee A. Lindquist},
url = {https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jgs.18775},
doi = {10.1111/jgs.18775},
issn = {0002-8614, 1532-5415},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {J American Geriatrics Society},
pages = {jgs.18775},
abstract = {Abstract
Background
Family caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease experience conflicts as they navigate health care but lack training to resolve these disputes. We sought to develop and pilot test an artificial‐intelligence negotiation training program, NegotiAge, for family caregivers.
Methods
We convened negotiation experts, a geriatrician, a social worker, and community‐based family caregivers. Content matter experts created short videos to teach negotiation skills. Caregivers generated dialogue surrounding conflicts. Computer scientists utilized the dialogue with the Interactive Arbitration Guide Online (IAGO) platform to develop avatar‐based agents (e.g., sibling, older adult, physician) for caregivers to practice negotiating. Pilot testing was conducted with family caregivers to assess usability (USE) and satisfaction (open‐ended questions with thematic analysis).
Results
Development: With NegotiAge, caregivers progress through didactic material, then receive scenarios to negotiate (e.g., physician recommends gastric tube, sibling disagrees with home support, older adult refusing support). Caregivers negotiate in real‐time with avatars who are designed to act like humans, including emotional tactics and irrational behaviors. Caregivers send/receive offers, using tactics until either mutual agreement or time expires. Immediate feedback is generated for the user to improve skills training. Pilot testing: Family caregivers (
n = 12) completed the program and survey. USE questionnaire (Likert scale 1–7) subset scores revealed: (1) Useful—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.76); (2) Ease—Mean 5.24 (SD 0.96); (3) Learn—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.74); (4) Satisfy—Mean 5.62 (SD 1.10). Items that received over 80% agreements were: It helps me be more effective; It helps me be more productive; It is useful; It gives me more control over the activities in my life; It makes the things I want to accomplish easier to get done. Participants were highly satisfied and found NegotiAge fun to use (91.7%), with 100% who would recommend it to a friend.
Conclusion
NegotiAge is an Artificial‐Intelligent Caregiver Negotiation Program, that is usable and feasible for family caregivers to become familiar with negotiating conflicts commonly seen in health care.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Background
Family caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease experience conflicts as they navigate health care but lack training to resolve these disputes. We sought to develop and pilot test an artificial‐intelligence negotiation training program, NegotiAge, for family caregivers.
Methods
We convened negotiation experts, a geriatrician, a social worker, and community‐based family caregivers. Content matter experts created short videos to teach negotiation skills. Caregivers generated dialogue surrounding conflicts. Computer scientists utilized the dialogue with the Interactive Arbitration Guide Online (IAGO) platform to develop avatar‐based agents (e.g., sibling, older adult, physician) for caregivers to practice negotiating. Pilot testing was conducted with family caregivers to assess usability (USE) and satisfaction (open‐ended questions with thematic analysis).
Results
Development: With NegotiAge, caregivers progress through didactic material, then receive scenarios to negotiate (e.g., physician recommends gastric tube, sibling disagrees with home support, older adult refusing support). Caregivers negotiate in real‐time with avatars who are designed to act like humans, including emotional tactics and irrational behaviors. Caregivers send/receive offers, using tactics until either mutual agreement or time expires. Immediate feedback is generated for the user to improve skills training. Pilot testing: Family caregivers (
n = 12) completed the program and survey. USE questionnaire (Likert scale 1–7) subset scores revealed: (1) Useful—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.76); (2) Ease—Mean 5.24 (SD 0.96); (3) Learn—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.74); (4) Satisfy—Mean 5.62 (SD 1.10). Items that received over 80% agreements were: It helps me be more effective; It helps me be more productive; It is useful; It gives me more control over the activities in my life; It makes the things I want to accomplish easier to get done. Participants were highly satisfied and found NegotiAge fun to use (91.7%), with 100% who would recommend it to a friend.
Conclusion
NegotiAge is an Artificial‐Intelligent Caregiver Negotiation Program, that is usable and feasible for family caregivers to become familiar with negotiating conflicts commonly seen in health care.
Barrett, Trevor; Faulk, Robert; Sergeant, Army Master; Boberg, Jill; Bartels, Matthew; Colonel, Marine Lieutenant; Saxon, Leslie A.
Force plate assessments in reconnaissance marine training company Journal Article
In: BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 16, 2024, ISSN: 2052-1847.
@article{barrett_force_2024,
title = {Force plate assessments in reconnaissance marine training company},
author = {Trevor Barrett and Robert Faulk and Army Master Sergeant and Jill Boberg and Matthew Bartels and Marine Lieutenant Colonel and Leslie A. Saxon},
url = {https://bmcsportsscimedrehabil.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13102-023-00796-z},
doi = {10.1186/s13102-023-00796-z},
issn = {2052-1847},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-01-22},
journal = {BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil},
volume = {16},
number = {1},
pages = {16},
abstract = {Abstract
The ability to obtain dynamic movement assessments using force plate technology holds the promise of providing more detailed knowledge of the strength, balance and forces generated by active-duty military personnel. To date, there are not well-defined use cases for implementation of force plate assessments in military training environments. We sought to determine if force plate technology assessments could provide additional insights, related to the likelihood of graduation, beyond that provided by traditional physical fitness tests (PFT’s), in an elite Marine training school. Serial force plate measures were also obtained on those Marines successfully completing training to determine if consistent measures reflecting the effects of training on muscle skeletal load-over-time could be accurately measured. A pre-training force plate assessment performed in 112 Marines did not predict graduation rates. For Marines who successfully completed the course, serial measures obtained throughout training were highly variable for each individual and no firm conclusions could be drawn related to load imposed or the fitness attained during training.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The ability to obtain dynamic movement assessments using force plate technology holds the promise of providing more detailed knowledge of the strength, balance and forces generated by active-duty military personnel. To date, there are not well-defined use cases for implementation of force plate assessments in military training environments. We sought to determine if force plate technology assessments could provide additional insights, related to the likelihood of graduation, beyond that provided by traditional physical fitness tests (PFT’s), in an elite Marine training school. Serial force plate measures were also obtained on those Marines successfully completing training to determine if consistent measures reflecting the effects of training on muscle skeletal load-over-time could be accurately measured. A pre-training force plate assessment performed in 112 Marines did not predict graduation rates. For Marines who successfully completed the course, serial measures obtained throughout training were highly variable for each individual and no firm conclusions could be drawn related to load imposed or the fitness attained during training.
Tak, Ala Nekouvaght; Becerik-Gerber, Burçin; Soibelman, Lucio; Lucas, Gale
A framework for investigating the acceptance of smart home technologies: Findings for residential smart HVAC systems Journal Article
In: Building and Environment, vol. 245, pp. 110935, 2023, ISSN: 03601323.
@article{tak_framework_2023,
title = {A framework for investigating the acceptance of smart home technologies: Findings for residential smart HVAC systems},
author = {Ala Nekouvaght Tak and Burçin Becerik-Gerber and Lucio Soibelman and Gale Lucas},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0360132323009629},
doi = {10.1016/j.buildenv.2023.110935},
issn = {03601323},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
journal = {Building and Environment},
volume = {245},
pages = {110935},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Cho, Hyundong; Liu, Shuai; Shi, Taiwei; Jain, Darpan; Rizk, Basem; Huang, Yuyang; Lu, Zixun; Wen, Nuan; Gratch, Jonathan; Ferrara, Emilio; May, Jonathan
Can Language Model Moderators Improve the Health of Online Discourse? Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.10781 [cs]).
@misc{cho_can_2023,
title = {Can Language Model Moderators Improve the Health of Online Discourse?},
author = {Hyundong Cho and Shuai Liu and Taiwei Shi and Darpan Jain and Basem Rizk and Yuyang Huang and Zixun Lu and Nuan Wen and Jonathan Gratch and Emilio Ferrara and Jonathan May},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.10781},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Human moderation of online conversation is essential to maintaining civility and focus in a dialogue, but is challenging to scale and harmful to moderators. The inclusion of sophisticated natural language generation modules as a force multiplier aid moderators is a tantalizing prospect, but adequate evaluation approaches have so far been elusive. In this paper, we establish a systematic definition of conversational moderation effectiveness through a multidisciplinary lens that incorporates insights from social science. We then propose a comprehensive evaluation framework that uses this definition to asses models' moderation capabilities independently of human intervention. With our framework, we conduct the first known study of conversational dialogue models as moderators, finding that appropriately prompted models can provide specific and fair feedback on toxic behavior but struggle to influence users to increase their levels of respect and cooperation.},
note = {arXiv:2311.10781 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Yang, Daniel; Kommineni, Aditya; Alshehri, Mohammad; Mohanty, Nilamadhab; Modi, Vedant; Gratch, Jonathan; Narayanan, Shrikanth
Context Unlocks Emotions: Text-based Emotion Classification Dataset Auditing with Large Language Models Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.03551 [cs]).
@misc{yang_context_2023,
title = {Context Unlocks Emotions: Text-based Emotion Classification Dataset Auditing with Large Language Models},
author = {Daniel Yang and Aditya Kommineni and Mohammad Alshehri and Nilamadhab Mohanty and Vedant Modi and Jonathan Gratch and Shrikanth Narayanan},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.03551},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {The lack of contextual information in text data can make the annotation process of text-based emotion classification datasets challenging. As a result, such datasets often contain labels that fail to consider all the relevant emotions in the vocabulary. This misalignment between text inputs and labels can degrade the performance of machine learning models trained on top of them. As re-annotating entire datasets is a costly and time-consuming task that cannot be done at scale, we propose to use the expressive capabilities of large language models to synthesize additional context for input text to increase its alignment with the annotated emotional labels. In this work, we propose a formal definition of textual context to motivate a prompting strategy to enhance such contextual information. We provide both human and empirical evaluation to demonstrate the efficacy of the enhanced context. Our method improves alignment between inputs and their human-annotated labels from both an empirical and human-evaluated standpoint.},
note = {arXiv:2311.03551 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Chang, Di; Shi, Yichun; Gao, Quankai; Fu, Jessica; Xu, Hongyi; Song, Guoxian; Yan, Qing; Yang, Xiao; Soleymani, Mohammad
MagicDance: Realistic Human Dance Video Generation with Motions & Facial Expressions Transfer Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.12052 [cs]).
@misc{chang_magicdance_2023,
title = {MagicDance: Realistic Human Dance Video Generation with Motions & Facial Expressions Transfer},
author = {Di Chang and Yichun Shi and Quankai Gao and Jessica Fu and Hongyi Xu and Guoxian Song and Qing Yan and Xiao Yang and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.12052},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {In this work, we propose MagicDance, a diffusion-based model for 2D human motion and facial expression transfer on challenging human dance videos. Specifically, we aim to generate human dance videos of any target identity driven by novel pose sequences while keeping the identity unchanged. To this end, we propose a two-stage training strategy to disentangle human motions and appearance (e.g., facial expressions, skin tone and dressing), consisting of the pretraining of an appearance-control block and fine-tuning of an appearance-pose-joint-control block over human dance poses of the same dataset. Our novel design enables robust appearance control with temporally consistent upper body, facial attributes, and even background. The model also generalizes well on unseen human identities and complex motion sequences without the need for any fine-tuning with additional data with diverse human attributes by leveraging the prior knowledge of image diffusion models. Moreover, the proposed model is easy to use and can be considered as a plug-in module/extension to Stable Diffusion. We also demonstrate the model's ability for zero-shot 2D animation generation, enabling not only the appearance transfer from one identity to another but also allowing for cartoon-like stylization given only pose inputs. Extensive experiments demonstrate our superior performance on the TikTok dataset.},
note = {arXiv:2311.12052 [cs]},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Liu, Ruying; Awada, Mohamad; Gerber, Burcin Becerik; Lucas, Gale M.; Roll, Shawn C.
Gender moderates the effects of ambient bergamot scent on stress restoration in offices Journal Article
In: Journal of Environmental Psychology, vol. 91, pp. 102135, 2023, ISSN: 02724944.
@article{liu_gender_2023,
title = {Gender moderates the effects of ambient bergamot scent on stress restoration in offices},
author = {Ruying Liu and Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik Gerber and Gale M. Lucas and Shawn C. Roll},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0272494423001834},
doi = {10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102135},
issn = {02724944},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-09-20},
journal = {Journal of Environmental Psychology},
volume = {91},
pages = {102135},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Filter
2024
Tran, Minh; Chang, Di; Siniukov, Maksim; Soleymani, Mohammad
Dyadic Interaction Modeling for Social Behavior Generation Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2403.09069 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@misc{tran_dyadic_2024,
title = {Dyadic Interaction Modeling for Social Behavior Generation},
author = {Minh Tran and Di Chang and Maksim Siniukov and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2403.09069},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-03-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Human-human communication is like a delicate dance where listeners and speakers concurrently interact to maintain conversational dynamics. Hence, an effective model for generating listener nonverbal behaviors requires understanding the dyadic context and interaction. In this paper, we present an effective framework for creating 3D facial motions in dyadic interactions. Existing work consider a listener as a reactive agent with reflexive behaviors to the speaker's voice and facial motions. The heart of our framework is Dyadic Interaction Modeling (DIM), a pre-training approach that jointly models speakers' and listeners' motions through masking and contrastive learning to learn representations that capture the dyadic context. To enable the generation of non-deterministic behaviors, we encode both listener and speaker motions into discrete latent representations, through VQ-VAE. The pre-trained model is further fine-tuned for motion generation. Extensive experiments demonstrate the superiority of our framework in generating listener motions, establishing a new state-of-the-art according to the quantitative measures capturing the diversity and realism of generated motions. Qualitative results demonstrate the superior capabilities of the proposed approach in generating diverse and realistic expressions, eye blinks and head gestures.},
note = {arXiv:2403.09069 [cs]},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Kwon, Deuksin; Weiss, Emily; Kulshrestha, Tara; Chawla, Kushal; Lucas, Gale M.; Gratch, Jonathan
Are LLMs Effective Negotiators? Systematic Evaluation of the Multifaceted Capabilities of LLMs in Negotiation Dialogues Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2402.13550 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Virtual Humans
@misc{kwon_are_2024,
title = {Are LLMs Effective Negotiators? Systematic Evaluation of the Multifaceted Capabilities of LLMs in Negotiation Dialogues},
author = {Deuksin Kwon and Emily Weiss and Tara Kulshrestha and Kushal Chawla and Gale M. Lucas and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13550},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {A successful negotiation demands a deep comprehension of the conversation context, Theory-of-Mind (ToM) skills to infer the partner's motives, as well as strategic reasoning and effective communication, making it challenging for automated systems. Given the remarkable performance of LLMs across a variety of NLP tasks, in this work, we aim to understand how LLMs can advance different aspects of negotiation research, ranging from designing dialogue systems to providing pedagogical feedback and scaling up data collection practices. To this end, we devise a methodology to analyze the multifaceted capabilities of LLMs across diverse dialogue scenarios covering all the time stages of a typical negotiation interaction. Our analysis adds to the increasing evidence for the superiority of GPT-4 across various tasks while also providing insights into specific tasks that remain difficult for LLMs. For instance, the models correlate poorly with human players when making subjective assessments about the negotiation dialogues and often struggle to generate responses that are contextually appropriate as well as strategically advantageous.},
note = {arXiv:2402.13550 [cs]},
keywords = {AI, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Marti, Deniz; Hanrahan, David; Sanchez-Triana, Ernesto; Wells, Mona; Corra, Lilian; Hu, Howard; Breysse, Patrick N.; Laborde, Amalia; Caravanos, Jack; Bertollini, Roberto; Porterfield, Kate; Fuller, Richard
Structured Expert Judgement Approach of the Health Impact of Various Chemicals and Classes of Chemicals Technical Report
Public and Global Health 2024.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags:
@techreport{marti_structured_2024,
title = {Structured Expert Judgement Approach of the Health Impact of Various Chemicals and Classes of Chemicals},
author = {Deniz Marti and David Hanrahan and Ernesto Sanchez-Triana and Mona Wells and Lilian Corra and Howard Hu and Patrick N. Breysse and Amalia Laborde and Jack Caravanos and Roberto Bertollini and Kate Porterfield and Richard Fuller},
url = {http://medrxiv.org/lookup/doi/10.1101/2024.01.30.24301863},
doi = {10.1101/2024.01.30.24301863},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
institution = {Public and Global Health},
abstract = {ABSTRACT
Introduction
Chemical contamination and pollution are an ongoing threat to human health and the environment. The concern over the consequences of chemical exposures at the global level continues to grow. Because resources are constrained, there is a need to prioritize interventions focused on the greatest health impact. Data, especially related to chemical exposures, are rarely available for most substances of concern, and alternate methods to evaluate their impact are needed.
Structured Expert Judgment (SEJ) Process
A Structured Expert Judgment
3
process was performed to provide plausible estimates of health impacts for 16 commonly found pollutants: asbestos, arsenic, benzene, chromium, cadmium, dioxins, fluoride, highly hazardous pesticides (HHPs), lead, mercury, polycyclic-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), Per- and Polyfluorinated Substances (PFAs), phthalates, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), and brominated flame retardants (BRFs). This process, undertaken by sector experts, weighed individual estimations of the probable global health scale health impacts of each pollutant using objective estimates of the expert opinions’ statistical accuracy and informativeness.
Main Findings
The foremost substances, in terms of mean projected annual total deaths, were lead, asbestos, arsenic, and HHPs. Lead surpasses the others by a large margin, with an estimated median value of 1.7 million deaths annually. The three other substances averaged between 136,000 and 274,000 deaths per year. Of the 12 other chemicals evaluated, none reached an estimated annual death count exceeding 100,000. These findings underscore the importance of prioritizing available resources on reducing and remediating the impacts of these key pollutants.
Range of Health Impacts
Based on the evidence available, experts concluded some of the more notorious chemical pollutants, such as PCBs and dioxin, do not result in high levels of human health impact from a global scale perspective. However, the chemical toxicity of some compounds released in recent decades, such as Endocrine Disrupters and PFAs, cannot be ignored, even if current impacts are limited. Moreover, the impact of some chemicals may be disproportionately large in some geographic areas. Continued research and monitoring are essential; and a preventative approach is needed for chemicals.
Future Directions
These results, and potential similar analyses of other chemicals, are provided as inputs to ongoing discussions about priority setting for global chemicals and pollution management. Furthermore, we suggest that this SEJ process be repeated periodically as new information becomes available.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {techreport}
}
Introduction
Chemical contamination and pollution are an ongoing threat to human health and the environment. The concern over the consequences of chemical exposures at the global level continues to grow. Because resources are constrained, there is a need to prioritize interventions focused on the greatest health impact. Data, especially related to chemical exposures, are rarely available for most substances of concern, and alternate methods to evaluate their impact are needed.
Structured Expert Judgment (SEJ) Process
A Structured Expert Judgment
3
process was performed to provide plausible estimates of health impacts for 16 commonly found pollutants: asbestos, arsenic, benzene, chromium, cadmium, dioxins, fluoride, highly hazardous pesticides (HHPs), lead, mercury, polycyclic-aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), Per- and Polyfluorinated Substances (PFAs), phthalates, endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs), and brominated flame retardants (BRFs). This process, undertaken by sector experts, weighed individual estimations of the probable global health scale health impacts of each pollutant using objective estimates of the expert opinions’ statistical accuracy and informativeness.
Main Findings
The foremost substances, in terms of mean projected annual total deaths, were lead, asbestos, arsenic, and HHPs. Lead surpasses the others by a large margin, with an estimated median value of 1.7 million deaths annually. The three other substances averaged between 136,000 and 274,000 deaths per year. Of the 12 other chemicals evaluated, none reached an estimated annual death count exceeding 100,000. These findings underscore the importance of prioritizing available resources on reducing and remediating the impacts of these key pollutants.
Range of Health Impacts
Based on the evidence available, experts concluded some of the more notorious chemical pollutants, such as PCBs and dioxin, do not result in high levels of human health impact from a global scale perspective. However, the chemical toxicity of some compounds released in recent decades, such as Endocrine Disrupters and PFAs, cannot be ignored, even if current impacts are limited. Moreover, the impact of some chemicals may be disproportionately large in some geographic areas. Continued research and monitoring are essential; and a preventative approach is needed for chemicals.
Future Directions
These results, and potential similar analyses of other chemicals, are provided as inputs to ongoing discussions about priority setting for global chemicals and pollution management. Furthermore, we suggest that this SEJ process be repeated periodically as new information becomes available.
Yu, Zifan; Tavakoli, Erfan Bank; Chen, Meida; You, Suya; Rao, Raghuveer; Agarwal, Sanjeev; Ren, Fengbo
TokenMotion: Motion-Guided Vision Transformer for Video Camouflaged Object Detection Via Learnable Token Selection Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2311.02535 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Narrative
@misc{yu_tokenmotion_2024,
title = {TokenMotion: Motion-Guided Vision Transformer for Video Camouflaged Object Detection Via Learnable Token Selection},
author = {Zifan Yu and Erfan Bank Tavakoli and Meida Chen and Suya You and Raghuveer Rao and Sanjeev Agarwal and Fengbo Ren},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.02535},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-02-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {The area of Video Camouflaged Object Detection (VCOD) presents unique challenges in the field of computer vision due to texture similarities between target objects and their surroundings, as well as irregular motion patterns caused by both objects and camera movement. In this paper, we introduce TokenMotion (TMNet), which employs a transformer-based model to enhance VCOD by extracting motion-guided features using a learnable token selection. Evaluated on the challenging MoCA-Mask dataset, TMNet achieves state-of-the-art performance in VCOD. It outperforms the existing state-of-the-art method by a 12.8% improvement in weighted F-measure, an 8.4% enhancement in S-measure, and a 10.7% boost in mean IoU. The results demonstrate the benefits of utilizing motion-guided features via learnable token selection within a transformer-based framework to tackle the intricate task of VCOD.},
note = {arXiv:2311.02535 [cs]},
keywords = {Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Narrative},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Liu, Ziming; Suen, Christine Wun Ki; Zou, Zhengbo; Chen, Meida; Shi, Yangming
Assessing Workers’ Operational Postures via Egocentric Camera Mapping Proceedings Article
In: Computing in Civil Engineering 2023, pp. 17–24, American Society of Civil Engineers, Corvallis, Oregon, 2024, ISBN: 978-0-7844-8522-4.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Narrative, STG
@inproceedings{liu_assessing_2024,
title = {Assessing Workers’ Operational Postures via Egocentric Camera Mapping},
author = {Ziming Liu and Christine Wun Ki Suen and Zhengbo Zou and Meida Chen and Yangming Shi},
url = {https://ascelibrary.org/doi/10.1061/9780784485224.003},
doi = {10.1061/9780784485224.003},
isbn = {978-0-7844-8522-4},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
booktitle = {Computing in Civil Engineering 2023},
pages = {17–24},
publisher = {American Society of Civil Engineers},
address = {Corvallis, Oregon},
keywords = {Narrative, STG},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Ustun, Volkan; Jorvekar, Ronit; Gurney, Nikolos; Pynadath, David; Wang, Yunzhe
Assessing Routing Decisions of Search and Rescue Teams in Service of an Artificial Social Intelligence Agent: Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence, pp. 313–320, SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, Rome, Italy, 2024, ISBN: 978-989-758-680-4.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Cognitive Architecture, Social Simulation
@inproceedings{ustun_assessing_2024,
title = {Assessing Routing Decisions of Search and Rescue Teams in Service of an Artificial Social Intelligence Agent:},
author = {Volkan Ustun and Ronit Jorvekar and Nikolos Gurney and David Pynadath and Yunzhe Wang},
url = {https://www.scitepress.org/DigitalLibrary/Link.aspx?doi=10.5220/0012388100003636},
doi = {10.5220/0012388100003636},
isbn = {978-989-758-680-4},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-19},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Agents and Artificial Intelligence},
pages = {313–320},
publisher = {SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications},
address = {Rome, Italy},
keywords = {AI, Cognitive Architecture, Social Simulation},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Gurney, Nikolos; Morstatter, Fred; Pynadath, David V.; Russell, Adam; Satyukov, Gleb
Operational Collective Intelligence of Humans and Machines Journal Article
In: 2024, (Publisher: [object Object] Version Number: 1).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Social Simulation
@article{gurney_operational_2024,
title = {Operational Collective Intelligence of Humans and Machines},
author = {Nikolos Gurney and Fred Morstatter and David V. Pynadath and Adam Russell and Gleb Satyukov},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13273},
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2402.13273},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
abstract = {We explore the use of aggregative crowdsourced forecasting (ACF) as a mechanism to help operationalize ``collective intelligence'' of human-machine teams for coordinated actions. We adopt the definition for Collective Intelligence as: ``A property of groups that emerges from synergies among data-information-knowledge, software-hardware, and individuals (those with new insights as well as recognized authorities) that enables just-in-time knowledge for better decisions than these three elements acting alone.'' Collective Intelligence emerges from new ways of connecting humans and AI to enable decision-advantage, in part by creating and leveraging additional sources of information that might otherwise not be included. Aggregative crowdsourced forecasting (ACF) is a recent key advancement towards Collective Intelligence wherein predictions (Xtextbackslash% probability that Y will happen) and rationales (why I believe it is this probability that X will happen) are elicited independently from a diverse crowd, aggregated, and then used to inform higher-level decision-making. This research asks whether ACF, as a key way to enable Operational Collective Intelligence, could be brought to bear on operational scenarios (i.e., sequences of events with defined agents, components, and interactions) and decision-making, and considers whether such a capability could provide novel operational capabilities to enable new forms of decision-advantage.},
note = {Publisher: [object Object]
Version Number: 1},
keywords = {Social Simulation},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gurney, Nikolos; Pynadath, David V.; Ustun, Volkan
Spontaneous Theory of Mind for Artificial Intelligence Journal Article
In: 2024, (Publisher: [object Object] Version Number: 1).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Social Simulation
@article{gurney_spontaneous_2024,
title = {Spontaneous Theory of Mind for Artificial Intelligence},
author = {Nikolos Gurney and David V. Pynadath and Volkan Ustun},
url = {https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.13272},
doi = {10.48550/ARXIV.2402.13272},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
abstract = {Existing approaches to Theory of Mind (ToM) in Artificial Intelligence (AI) overemphasize prompted, or cue-based, ToM, which may limit our collective ability to develop Artificial Social Intelligence (ASI). Drawing from research in computer science, cognitive science, and related disciplines, we contrast prompted ToM with what we call spontaneous ToM – reasoning about others' mental states that is grounded in unintentional, possibly uncontrollable cognitive functions. We argue for a principled approach to studying and developing AI ToM and suggest that a robust, or general, ASI will respond to prompts textbackslashtextitand spontaneously engage in social reasoning.},
note = {Publisher: [object Object]
Version Number: 1},
keywords = {AI, Social Simulation},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gratch, Jonathan; Greene, Gretchen; Picard, Rosalind; Urquhart, Lachlan; Valstar, Michel
Guest Editorial: Ethics in Affective Computing Journal Article
In: IEEE Trans. Affective Comput., vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 1–3, 2024, ISSN: 1949-3045, 2371-9850.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@article{gratch_guest_2024,
title = {Guest Editorial: Ethics in Affective Computing},
author = {Jonathan Gratch and Gretchen Greene and Rosalind Picard and Lachlan Urquhart and Michel Valstar},
url = {https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10454111/},
doi = {10.1109/TAFFC.2023.3322918},
issn = {1949-3045, 2371-9850},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-03-14},
journal = {IEEE Trans. Affective Comput.},
volume = {15},
number = {1},
pages = {1–3},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Spiegel, Brennan M. R.; Rizzo, Albert; Persky, Susan; Liran, Omer; Wiederhold, Brenda; Woods, Susan; Donovan, Kate; Sarkar, Korak; Xiang, Henry; Joo, Sun; Jotwani, Rohan; Lang, Min; Paul, Margot; Senter-Zapata, Mike; Widmeier, Keith; Zhang, Haipeng
What Is Medical Extended Reality? A Taxonomy Defining the Current Breadth and Depth of an Evolving Field Journal Article
In: Journal of Medical Extended Reality, vol. 1, no. 1, pp. 4–12, 2024, ISSN: 2994-1520.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: MedVR, UARC
@article{spiegel_what_2024,
title = {What Is Medical Extended Reality? A Taxonomy Defining the Current Breadth and Depth of an Evolving Field},
author = {Brennan M. R. Spiegel and Albert Rizzo and Susan Persky and Omer Liran and Brenda Wiederhold and Susan Woods and Kate Donovan and Korak Sarkar and Henry Xiang and Sun Joo and Rohan Jotwani and Min Lang and Margot Paul and Mike Senter-Zapata and Keith Widmeier and Haipeng Zhang},
url = {https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012},
doi = {10.1089/jmxr.2023.0012},
issn = {2994-1520},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-20},
journal = {Journal of Medical Extended Reality},
volume = {1},
number = {1},
pages = {4–12},
keywords = {MedVR, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Awada, Mohamad; Gerber, Burcin Becerik; Lucas, Gale M.; Roll, Shawn C.
Stress appraisal in the workplace and its associations with productivity and mood: Insights from a multimodal machine learning analysis Journal Article
In: PLoS ONE, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. e0296468, 2024, ISSN: 1932-6203.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Machine Learning, UARC
@article{awada_stress_2024,
title = {Stress appraisal in the workplace and its associations with productivity and mood: Insights from a multimodal machine learning analysis},
author = {Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik Gerber and Gale M. Lucas and Shawn C. Roll},
editor = {Iftikhar Ahmed Khan},
url = {https://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0296468},
doi = {10.1371/journal.pone.0296468},
issn = {1932-6203},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {PLoS ONE},
volume = {19},
number = {1},
pages = {e0296468},
abstract = {Previous studies have primarily focused on predicting stress arousal, encompassing physiological, behavioral, and psychological responses to stressors, while neglecting the examination of stress appraisal. Stress appraisal involves the cognitive evaluation of a situation as stressful or non-stressful, and as a threat/pressure or a challenge/opportunity. In this study, we investigated several research questions related to the association between states of stress appraisal (i.e., boredom, eustress, coexisting eustress-distress, distress) and various factors such as stress levels, mood, productivity, physiological and behavioral responses, as well as the most effective ML algorithms and data signals for predicting stress appraisal. The results support the Yerkes-Dodson law, showing that a moderate stress level is associated with increased productivity and positive mood, while low and high levels of stress are related to decreased productivity and negative mood, with distress overpowering eustress when they coexist. Changes in stress appraisal relative to physiological and behavioral features were examined through the lenses of stress arousal, activity engagement, and performance. An XGBOOST model achieved the best prediction accuracies of stress appraisal, reaching 82.78% when combining physiological and behavioral features and 79.55% using only the physiological dataset. The small accuracy difference of 3% indicates that physiological data alone may be adequate to accurately predict stress appraisal, and the feature importance results identified electrodermal activity, skin temperature, and blood volume pulse as the most useful physiologic features. Implementing these models within work environments can serve as a foundation for designing workplace policies, practices, and stress management strategies that prioritize the promotion of eustress while reducing distress and boredom. Such efforts can foster a supportive work environment to enhance employee well-being and productivity.},
keywords = {Machine Learning, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Jago, Arthur S.; Raveendhran, Roshni; Fast, Nathanael; Gratch, Jonathan
Algorithmic management diminishes status: An unintended consequence of using machines to perform social roles Journal Article
In: Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, vol. 110, pp. 104553, 2024, ISSN: 00221031.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@article{jago_algorithmic_2024,
title = {Algorithmic management diminishes status: An unintended consequence of using machines to perform social roles},
author = {Arthur S. Jago and Roshni Raveendhran and Nathanael Fast and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0022103123001105},
doi = {10.1016/j.jesp.2023.104553},
issn = {00221031},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {Journal of Experimental Social Psychology},
volume = {110},
pages = {104553},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Shi, Zhonghao; O'Connell, Allison; Li, Zongjian; Liu, Siqi; Ayissi, Jennifer; Hoffman, Guy; Soleymani, Mohammad; Matarić, Maja J.
Build Your Own Robot Friend: An Open-Source Learning Module for Accessible and Engaging AI Education Miscellaneous
2024, (arXiv:2402.01647 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@misc{shi_build_2024,
title = {Build Your Own Robot Friend: An Open-Source Learning Module for Accessible and Engaging AI Education},
author = {Zhonghao Shi and Allison O'Connell and Zongjian Li and Siqi Liu and Jennifer Ayissi and Guy Hoffman and Mohammad Soleymani and Maja J. Matarić},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2402.01647},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {As artificial intelligence (AI) is playing an increasingly important role in our society and global economy, AI education and literacy have become necessary components in college and K-12 education to prepare students for an AI-powered society. However, current AI curricula have not yet been made accessible and engaging enough for students and schools from all socio-economic backgrounds with different educational goals. In this work, we developed an open-source learning module for college and high school students, which allows students to build their own robot companion from the ground up. This open platform can be used to provide hands-on experience and introductory knowledge about various aspects of AI, including robotics, machine learning (ML), software engineering, and mechanical engineering. Because of the social and personal nature of a socially assistive robot companion, this module also puts a special emphasis on human-centered AI, enabling students to develop a better understanding of human-AI interaction and AI ethics through hands-on learning activities. With open-source documentation, assembling manuals and affordable materials, students from different socio-economic backgrounds can personalize their learning experience based on their individual educational goals. To evaluate the student-perceived quality of our module, we conducted a usability testing workshop with 15 college students recruited from a minority-serving institution. Our results indicate that our AI module is effective, easy-to-follow, and engaging, and it increases student interest in studying AI/ML and robotics in the future. We hope that this work will contribute toward accessible and engaging AI education in human-AI interaction for college and high school students.},
note = {arXiv:2402.01647 [cs]},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Murawski, Alaine; Ramirez‐Zohfeld, Vanessa; Mell, Johnathan; Tschoe, Marianne; Schierer, Allison; Olvera, Charles; Brett, Jeanne; Gratch, Jonathan; Lindquist, Lee A.
Development and pilot testing of an artificial intelligence‐based family caregiver negotiation program Journal Article
In: J American Geriatrics Society, pp. jgs.18775, 2024, ISSN: 0002-8614, 1532-5415.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Virtual Humans
@article{murawski_development_2024,
title = {Development and pilot testing of an artificial intelligence‐based family caregiver negotiation program},
author = {Alaine Murawski and Vanessa Ramirez‐Zohfeld and Johnathan Mell and Marianne Tschoe and Allison Schierer and Charles Olvera and Jeanne Brett and Jonathan Gratch and Lee A. Lindquist},
url = {https://agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jgs.18775},
doi = {10.1111/jgs.18775},
issn = {0002-8614, 1532-5415},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
journal = {J American Geriatrics Society},
pages = {jgs.18775},
abstract = {Abstract
Background
Family caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease experience conflicts as they navigate health care but lack training to resolve these disputes. We sought to develop and pilot test an artificial‐intelligence negotiation training program, NegotiAge, for family caregivers.
Methods
We convened negotiation experts, a geriatrician, a social worker, and community‐based family caregivers. Content matter experts created short videos to teach negotiation skills. Caregivers generated dialogue surrounding conflicts. Computer scientists utilized the dialogue with the Interactive Arbitration Guide Online (IAGO) platform to develop avatar‐based agents (e.g., sibling, older adult, physician) for caregivers to practice negotiating. Pilot testing was conducted with family caregivers to assess usability (USE) and satisfaction (open‐ended questions with thematic analysis).
Results
Development: With NegotiAge, caregivers progress through didactic material, then receive scenarios to negotiate (e.g., physician recommends gastric tube, sibling disagrees with home support, older adult refusing support). Caregivers negotiate in real‐time with avatars who are designed to act like humans, including emotional tactics and irrational behaviors. Caregivers send/receive offers, using tactics until either mutual agreement or time expires. Immediate feedback is generated for the user to improve skills training. Pilot testing: Family caregivers (
n = 12) completed the program and survey. USE questionnaire (Likert scale 1–7) subset scores revealed: (1) Useful—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.76); (2) Ease—Mean 5.24 (SD 0.96); (3) Learn—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.74); (4) Satisfy—Mean 5.62 (SD 1.10). Items that received over 80% agreements were: It helps me be more effective; It helps me be more productive; It is useful; It gives me more control over the activities in my life; It makes the things I want to accomplish easier to get done. Participants were highly satisfied and found NegotiAge fun to use (91.7%), with 100% who would recommend it to a friend.
Conclusion
NegotiAge is an Artificial‐Intelligent Caregiver Negotiation Program, that is usable and feasible for family caregivers to become familiar with negotiating conflicts commonly seen in health care.},
keywords = {AI, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Background
Family caregivers of people with Alzheimer's disease experience conflicts as they navigate health care but lack training to resolve these disputes. We sought to develop and pilot test an artificial‐intelligence negotiation training program, NegotiAge, for family caregivers.
Methods
We convened negotiation experts, a geriatrician, a social worker, and community‐based family caregivers. Content matter experts created short videos to teach negotiation skills. Caregivers generated dialogue surrounding conflicts. Computer scientists utilized the dialogue with the Interactive Arbitration Guide Online (IAGO) platform to develop avatar‐based agents (e.g., sibling, older adult, physician) for caregivers to practice negotiating. Pilot testing was conducted with family caregivers to assess usability (USE) and satisfaction (open‐ended questions with thematic analysis).
Results
Development: With NegotiAge, caregivers progress through didactic material, then receive scenarios to negotiate (e.g., physician recommends gastric tube, sibling disagrees with home support, older adult refusing support). Caregivers negotiate in real‐time with avatars who are designed to act like humans, including emotional tactics and irrational behaviors. Caregivers send/receive offers, using tactics until either mutual agreement or time expires. Immediate feedback is generated for the user to improve skills training. Pilot testing: Family caregivers (
n = 12) completed the program and survey. USE questionnaire (Likert scale 1–7) subset scores revealed: (1) Useful—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.76); (2) Ease—Mean 5.24 (SD 0.96); (3) Learn—Mean 5.69 (SD 0.74); (4) Satisfy—Mean 5.62 (SD 1.10). Items that received over 80% agreements were: It helps me be more effective; It helps me be more productive; It is useful; It gives me more control over the activities in my life; It makes the things I want to accomplish easier to get done. Participants were highly satisfied and found NegotiAge fun to use (91.7%), with 100% who would recommend it to a friend.
Conclusion
NegotiAge is an Artificial‐Intelligent Caregiver Negotiation Program, that is usable and feasible for family caregivers to become familiar with negotiating conflicts commonly seen in health care.
Barrett, Trevor; Faulk, Robert; Sergeant, Army Master; Boberg, Jill; Bartels, Matthew; Colonel, Marine Lieutenant; Saxon, Leslie A.
Force plate assessments in reconnaissance marine training company Journal Article
In: BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil, vol. 16, no. 1, pp. 16, 2024, ISSN: 2052-1847.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: MedVR, UARC
@article{barrett_force_2024,
title = {Force plate assessments in reconnaissance marine training company},
author = {Trevor Barrett and Robert Faulk and Army Master Sergeant and Jill Boberg and Matthew Bartels and Marine Lieutenant Colonel and Leslie A. Saxon},
url = {https://bmcsportsscimedrehabil.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13102-023-00796-z},
doi = {10.1186/s13102-023-00796-z},
issn = {2052-1847},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-01-01},
urldate = {2024-01-22},
journal = {BMC Sports Sci Med Rehabil},
volume = {16},
number = {1},
pages = {16},
abstract = {Abstract
The ability to obtain dynamic movement assessments using force plate technology holds the promise of providing more detailed knowledge of the strength, balance and forces generated by active-duty military personnel. To date, there are not well-defined use cases for implementation of force plate assessments in military training environments. We sought to determine if force plate technology assessments could provide additional insights, related to the likelihood of graduation, beyond that provided by traditional physical fitness tests (PFT’s), in an elite Marine training school. Serial force plate measures were also obtained on those Marines successfully completing training to determine if consistent measures reflecting the effects of training on muscle skeletal load-over-time could be accurately measured. A pre-training force plate assessment performed in 112 Marines did not predict graduation rates. For Marines who successfully completed the course, serial measures obtained throughout training were highly variable for each individual and no firm conclusions could be drawn related to load imposed or the fitness attained during training.},
keywords = {MedVR, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The ability to obtain dynamic movement assessments using force plate technology holds the promise of providing more detailed knowledge of the strength, balance and forces generated by active-duty military personnel. To date, there are not well-defined use cases for implementation of force plate assessments in military training environments. We sought to determine if force plate technology assessments could provide additional insights, related to the likelihood of graduation, beyond that provided by traditional physical fitness tests (PFT’s), in an elite Marine training school. Serial force plate measures were also obtained on those Marines successfully completing training to determine if consistent measures reflecting the effects of training on muscle skeletal load-over-time could be accurately measured. A pre-training force plate assessment performed in 112 Marines did not predict graduation rates. For Marines who successfully completed the course, serial measures obtained throughout training were highly variable for each individual and no firm conclusions could be drawn related to load imposed or the fitness attained during training.
2023
Tak, Ala Nekouvaght; Becerik-Gerber, Burçin; Soibelman, Lucio; Lucas, Gale
A framework for investigating the acceptance of smart home technologies: Findings for residential smart HVAC systems Journal Article
In: Building and Environment, vol. 245, pp. 110935, 2023, ISSN: 03601323.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{tak_framework_2023,
title = {A framework for investigating the acceptance of smart home technologies: Findings for residential smart HVAC systems},
author = {Ala Nekouvaght Tak and Burçin Becerik-Gerber and Lucio Soibelman and Gale Lucas},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0360132323009629},
doi = {10.1016/j.buildenv.2023.110935},
issn = {03601323},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
journal = {Building and Environment},
volume = {245},
pages = {110935},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Cho, Hyundong; Liu, Shuai; Shi, Taiwei; Jain, Darpan; Rizk, Basem; Huang, Yuyang; Lu, Zixun; Wen, Nuan; Gratch, Jonathan; Ferrara, Emilio; May, Jonathan
Can Language Model Moderators Improve the Health of Online Discourse? Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.10781 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Dialogue, UARC, Virtual Humans
@misc{cho_can_2023,
title = {Can Language Model Moderators Improve the Health of Online Discourse?},
author = {Hyundong Cho and Shuai Liu and Taiwei Shi and Darpan Jain and Basem Rizk and Yuyang Huang and Zixun Lu and Nuan Wen and Jonathan Gratch and Emilio Ferrara and Jonathan May},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.10781},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Human moderation of online conversation is essential to maintaining civility and focus in a dialogue, but is challenging to scale and harmful to moderators. The inclusion of sophisticated natural language generation modules as a force multiplier aid moderators is a tantalizing prospect, but adequate evaluation approaches have so far been elusive. In this paper, we establish a systematic definition of conversational moderation effectiveness through a multidisciplinary lens that incorporates insights from social science. We then propose a comprehensive evaluation framework that uses this definition to asses models' moderation capabilities independently of human intervention. With our framework, we conduct the first known study of conversational dialogue models as moderators, finding that appropriately prompted models can provide specific and fair feedback on toxic behavior but struggle to influence users to increase their levels of respect and cooperation.},
note = {arXiv:2311.10781 [cs]},
keywords = {AI, Dialogue, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Yang, Daniel; Kommineni, Aditya; Alshehri, Mohammad; Mohanty, Nilamadhab; Modi, Vedant; Gratch, Jonathan; Narayanan, Shrikanth
Context Unlocks Emotions: Text-based Emotion Classification Dataset Auditing with Large Language Models Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.03551 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, UARC, Virtual Humans
@misc{yang_context_2023,
title = {Context Unlocks Emotions: Text-based Emotion Classification Dataset Auditing with Large Language Models},
author = {Daniel Yang and Aditya Kommineni and Mohammad Alshehri and Nilamadhab Mohanty and Vedant Modi and Jonathan Gratch and Shrikanth Narayanan},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.03551},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {The lack of contextual information in text data can make the annotation process of text-based emotion classification datasets challenging. As a result, such datasets often contain labels that fail to consider all the relevant emotions in the vocabulary. This misalignment between text inputs and labels can degrade the performance of machine learning models trained on top of them. As re-annotating entire datasets is a costly and time-consuming task that cannot be done at scale, we propose to use the expressive capabilities of large language models to synthesize additional context for input text to increase its alignment with the annotated emotional labels. In this work, we propose a formal definition of textual context to motivate a prompting strategy to enhance such contextual information. We provide both human and empirical evaluation to demonstrate the efficacy of the enhanced context. Our method improves alignment between inputs and their human-annotated labels from both an empirical and human-evaluated standpoint.},
note = {arXiv:2311.03551 [cs]},
keywords = {AI, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Chang, Di; Shi, Yichun; Gao, Quankai; Fu, Jessica; Xu, Hongyi; Song, Guoxian; Yan, Qing; Yang, Xiao; Soleymani, Mohammad
MagicDance: Realistic Human Dance Video Generation with Motions & Facial Expressions Transfer Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2311.12052 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@misc{chang_magicdance_2023,
title = {MagicDance: Realistic Human Dance Video Generation with Motions & Facial Expressions Transfer},
author = {Di Chang and Yichun Shi and Quankai Gao and Jessica Fu and Hongyi Xu and Guoxian Song and Qing Yan and Xiao Yang and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2311.12052},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {In this work, we propose MagicDance, a diffusion-based model for 2D human motion and facial expression transfer on challenging human dance videos. Specifically, we aim to generate human dance videos of any target identity driven by novel pose sequences while keeping the identity unchanged. To this end, we propose a two-stage training strategy to disentangle human motions and appearance (e.g., facial expressions, skin tone and dressing), consisting of the pretraining of an appearance-control block and fine-tuning of an appearance-pose-joint-control block over human dance poses of the same dataset. Our novel design enables robust appearance control with temporally consistent upper body, facial attributes, and even background. The model also generalizes well on unseen human identities and complex motion sequences without the need for any fine-tuning with additional data with diverse human attributes by leveraging the prior knowledge of image diffusion models. Moreover, the proposed model is easy to use and can be considered as a plug-in module/extension to Stable Diffusion. We also demonstrate the model's ability for zero-shot 2D animation generation, enabling not only the appearance transfer from one identity to another but also allowing for cartoon-like stylization given only pose inputs. Extensive experiments demonstrate our superior performance on the TikTok dataset.},
note = {arXiv:2311.12052 [cs]},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Liu, Ruying; Awada, Mohamad; Gerber, Burcin Becerik; Lucas, Gale M.; Roll, Shawn C.
Gender moderates the effects of ambient bergamot scent on stress restoration in offices Journal Article
In: Journal of Environmental Psychology, vol. 91, pp. 102135, 2023, ISSN: 02724944.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{liu_gender_2023,
title = {Gender moderates the effects of ambient bergamot scent on stress restoration in offices},
author = {Ruying Liu and Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik Gerber and Gale M. Lucas and Shawn C. Roll},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0272494423001834},
doi = {10.1016/j.jenvp.2023.102135},
issn = {02724944},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-11-01},
urldate = {2023-09-20},
journal = {Journal of Environmental Psychology},
volume = {91},
pages = {102135},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Lukin, Stephanie M.; Pollard, Kimberly A.; Bonial, Claire; Hudson, Taylor; Arstein, Ron; Voss, Clare; Traum, David
Navigating to Success in Multi-Modal Human-Robot Collaboration: Analysis and Corpus Release Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2310.17568 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Natural Language, UARC
@misc{lukin_navigating_2023,
title = {Navigating to Success in Multi-Modal Human-Robot Collaboration: Analysis and Corpus Release},
author = {Stephanie M. Lukin and Kimberly A. Pollard and Claire Bonial and Taylor Hudson and Ron Arstein and Clare Voss and David Traum},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.17568},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Human-guided robotic exploration is a useful approach to gathering information at remote locations, especially those that might be too risky, inhospitable, or inaccessible for humans. Maintaining common ground between the remotely-located partners is a challenge, one that can be facilitated by multi-modal communication. In this paper, we explore how participants utilized multiple modalities to investigate a remote location with the help of a robotic partner. Participants issued spoken natural language instructions and received from the robot: text-based feedback, continuous 2D LIDAR mapping, and upon-request static photographs. We noticed that different strategies were adopted in terms of use of the modalities, and hypothesize that these differences may be correlated with success at several exploration sub-tasks. We found that requesting photos may have improved the identification and counting of some key entities (doorways in particular) and that this strategy did not hinder the amount of overall area exploration. Future work with larger samples may reveal the effects of more nuanced photo and dialogue strategies, which can inform the training of robotic agents. Additionally, we announce the release of our unique multi-modal corpus of human-robot communication in an exploration context: SCOUT, the Situated Corpus on Understanding Transactions.},
note = {arXiv:2310.17568 [cs]},
keywords = {Natural Language, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Gilani, Setareh Nasihati; Pollard, Kimberly; Traum, David
Multimodal Prediction of User's Performance in High-Stress Dialogue Interactions Proceedings Article
In: International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction, pp. 71–75, ACM, Paris France, 2023, ISBN: 9798400703218.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Natural Language, UARC
@inproceedings{nasihati_gilani_multimodal_2023,
title = {Multimodal Prediction of User's Performance in High-Stress Dialogue Interactions},
author = {Setareh Nasihati Gilani and Kimberly Pollard and David Traum},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3610661.3617166},
doi = {10.1145/3610661.3617166},
isbn = {9798400703218},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
booktitle = {International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction},
pages = {71–75},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Paris France},
keywords = {Natural Language, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Awada, Mohamad; Becerik-Gerber, Burcin; Lucas, Gale; Roll, Shawn C.
Predicting Office Workers’ Productivity: A Machine Learning Approach Integrating Physiological, Behavioral, and Psychological Indicators Journal Article
In: Sensors, vol. 23, no. 21, pp. 8694, 2023, ISSN: 1424-8220.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Machine Learning, UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{awada_predicting_2023,
title = {Predicting Office Workers’ Productivity: A Machine Learning Approach Integrating Physiological, Behavioral, and Psychological Indicators},
author = {Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik-Gerber and Gale Lucas and Shawn C. Roll},
url = {https://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/23/21/8694},
doi = {10.3390/s23218694},
issn = {1424-8220},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
journal = {Sensors},
volume = {23},
number = {21},
pages = {8694},
abstract = {This research pioneers the application of a machine learning framework to predict the perceived productivity of office workers using physiological, behavioral, and psychological features. Two approaches were compared: the baseline model, predicting productivity based on physiological and behavioral characteristics, and the extended model, incorporating predictions of psychological states such as stress, eustress, distress, and mood. Various machine learning models were utilized and compared to assess their predictive accuracy for psychological states and productivity, with XGBoost emerging as the top performer. The extended model outperformed the baseline model, achieving an R2 of 0.60 and a lower MAE of 10.52, compared to the baseline model’s R2 of 0.48 and MAE of 16.62. The extended model’s feature importance analysis revealed valuable insights into the key predictors of productivity, shedding light on the role of psychological states in the prediction process. Notably, mood and eustress emerged as significant predictors of productivity. Physiological and behavioral features, including skin temperature, electrodermal activity, facial movements, and wrist acceleration, were also identified. Lastly, a comparative analysis revealed that wearable devices (Empatica E4 and H10 Polar) outperformed workstation addons (Kinect camera and computer-usage monitoring application) in predicting productivity, emphasizing the potential utility of wearable devices as an independent tool for assessment of productivity. Implementing the model within smart workstations allows for adaptable environments that boost productivity and overall well-being among office workers.},
keywords = {Machine Learning, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Chawla, Kushal; Wu, Ian; Rong, Yu; Lucas, Gale M.; Gratch, Jonathan
Be Selfish, But Wisely: Investigating the Impact of Agent Personality in Mixed-Motive Human-Agent Interactions Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2310.14404 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Dialogue, UARC, Virtual Humans
@misc{chawla_be_2023,
title = {Be Selfish, But Wisely: Investigating the Impact of Agent Personality in Mixed-Motive Human-Agent Interactions},
author = {Kushal Chawla and Ian Wu and Yu Rong and Gale M. Lucas and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.14404},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {A natural way to design a negotiation dialogue system is via self-play RL: train an agent that learns to maximize its performance by interacting with a simulated user that has been designed to imitate human-human dialogue data. Although this procedure has been adopted in prior work, we find that it results in a fundamentally flawed system that fails to learn the value of compromise in a negotiation, which can often lead to no agreements (i.e., the partner walking away without a deal), ultimately hurting the model's overall performance. We investigate this observation in the context of the DealOrNoDeal task, a multi-issue negotiation over books, hats, and balls. Grounded in negotiation theory from Economics, we modify the training procedure in two novel ways to design agents with diverse personalities and analyze their performance with human partners. We find that although both techniques show promise, a selfish agent, which maximizes its own performance while also avoiding walkaways, performs superior to other variants by implicitly learning to generate value for both itself and the negotiation partner. We discuss the implications of our findings for what it means to be a successful negotiation dialogue system and how these systems should be designed in the future.},
note = {arXiv:2310.14404 [cs]},
keywords = {Dialogue, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Prinzing, Michael; Garton, Catherine; Berman, Catherine J.; Zhou, Jieni; West, Taylor Nicole; Gratch, Jonathan; Fredrickson, Barbara
Can AI Agents Help Humans to Connect? Technical Report
PsyArXiv 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, UARC, Virtual Humans
@techreport{prinzing_can_2023,
title = {Can AI Agents Help Humans to Connect?},
author = {Michael Prinzing and Catherine Garton and Catherine J. Berman and Jieni Zhou and Taylor Nicole West and Jonathan Gratch and Barbara Fredrickson},
url = {https://osf.io/muq6s},
doi = {10.31234/osf.io/muq6s},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
institution = {PsyArXiv},
abstract = {This paper reports on a pre-registered experiment designed to test whether artificial agents can help people to create more moments of high-quality connection with other humans. Of four pre-registered hypotheses, we found (partial) support for only one.},
keywords = {AI, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {techreport}
}
Lin, Eleanor; Hale, James; Gratch, Jonathan
Toward a Better Understanding of the Emotional Dynamics of Negotiation with Large Language Models Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the Twenty-fourth International Symposium on Theory, Algorithmic Foundations, and Protocol Design for Mobile Networks and Mobile Computing, pp. 545–550, ACM, Washington DC USA, 2023, ISBN: 978-1-4503-9926-5.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{lin_toward_2023,
title = {Toward a Better Understanding of the Emotional Dynamics of Negotiation with Large Language Models},
author = {Eleanor Lin and James Hale and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3565287.3617637},
doi = {10.1145/3565287.3617637},
isbn = {978-1-4503-9926-5},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Twenty-fourth International Symposium on Theory, Algorithmic Foundations, and Protocol Design for Mobile Networks and Mobile Computing},
pages = {545–550},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Washington DC USA},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Tran, Minh; Soleymani, Mohammad
Privacy-preserving Representation Learning for Speech Understanding Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2310.17194 [eess]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@misc{tran_privacy-preserving_2023,
title = {Privacy-preserving Representation Learning for Speech Understanding},
author = {Minh Tran and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2310.17194},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Existing privacy-preserving speech representation learning methods target a single application domain. In this paper, we present a novel framework to anonymize utterance-level speech embeddings generated by pre-trained encoders and show its effectiveness for a range of speech classification tasks. Specifically, given the representations from a pre-trained encoder, we train a Transformer to estimate the representations for the same utterances spoken by other speakers. During inference, the extracted representations can be converted into different identities to preserve privacy. We compare the results with the voice anonymization baselines from the VoicePrivacy 2022 challenge. We evaluate our framework on speaker identification for privacy and emotion recognition, depression classification, and intent classification for utility. Our method outperforms the baselines on privacy and utility in paralinguistic tasks and achieves comparable performance for intent classification.},
note = {arXiv:2310.17194 [eess]},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Ahmed, Tamim; Rikakis, Thanassis; Kelliher, Aisling; Soleymani, Mohammad
ASAR Dataset and Computational Model for Affective State Recognition During ARAT Assessment for Upper Extremity Stroke Survivors Proceedings Article
In: International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction, pp. 11–15, ACM, Paris France, 2023, ISBN: 9798400703218.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{ahmed_asar_2023,
title = {ASAR Dataset and Computational Model for Affective State Recognition During ARAT Assessment for Upper Extremity Stroke Survivors},
author = {Tamim Ahmed and Thanassis Rikakis and Aisling Kelliher and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3610661.3617154},
doi = {10.1145/3610661.3617154},
isbn = {9798400703218},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
booktitle = {International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction},
pages = {11–15},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Paris France},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Andrist, Sean; Bohus, Dan; Li, Zongjian; Soleymani, Mohammad
Platform for Situated Intelligence and OpenSense: A Tutorial on Building Multimodal Interactive Applications for Research Proceedings Article
In: International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction, pp. 105–106, ACM, Paris France, 2023, ISBN: 9798400703218.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{andrist_platform_2023,
title = {Platform for Situated Intelligence and OpenSense: A Tutorial on Building Multimodal Interactive Applications for Research},
author = {Sean Andrist and Dan Bohus and Zongjian Li and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3610661.3617603},
doi = {10.1145/3610661.3617603},
isbn = {9798400703218},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
booktitle = {International Cconference on Multimodal Interaction},
pages = {105–106},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Paris France},
keywords = {AI, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Tran, Trang; Yin, Yufeng; Tavabi, Leili; Delacruz, Joannalyn; Borsari, Brian; Woolley, Joshua D; Scherer, Stefan; Soleymani, Mohammad
Multimodal Analysis and Assessment of Therapist Empathy in Motivational Interviews Proceedings Article
In: INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MULTIMODAL INTERACTION, pp. 406–415, ACM, Paris France, 2023, ISBN: 9798400700552.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{tran_multimodal_2023,
title = {Multimodal Analysis and Assessment of Therapist Empathy in Motivational Interviews},
author = {Trang Tran and Yufeng Yin and Leili Tavabi and Joannalyn Delacruz and Brian Borsari and Joshua D Woolley and Stefan Scherer and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3577190.3614105},
doi = {10.1145/3577190.3614105},
isbn = {9798400700552},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-12-07},
booktitle = {INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MULTIMODAL INTERACTION},
pages = {406–415},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Paris France},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Seyedrezaei, Mirmahdi; Awada, Mohamad; Becerik-Gerber, Burcin; Lucas, Gale; Roll, Shawn
In: Building and Environment, vol. 244, pp. 110743, 2023, ISSN: 03601323.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{seyedrezaei_interaction_2023,
title = {Interaction effects of indoor environmental quality factors on cognitive performance and perceived comfort of young adults in open plan offices in North American Mediterranean climate},
author = {Mirmahdi Seyedrezaei and Mohamad Awada and Burcin Becerik-Gerber and Gale Lucas and Shawn Roll},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0360132323007709},
doi = {10.1016/j.buildenv.2023.110743},
issn = {03601323},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-10-01},
urldate = {2023-09-20},
journal = {Building and Environment},
volume = {244},
pages = {110743},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gainer, Alesia; Aptaker, Allison; Artstein, Ron; Cobbins, David; Core, Mark; Gordon, Carla; Leuski, Anton; Li, Zongjian; Merchant, Chirag; Nelson, David; Soleymani, Mohammad; Traum, David
DIVIS: Digital Interactive Victim Intake Simulator Proceedings Article
In: Proceedings of the 23rd ACM International Conference on Intelligent Virtual Agents, pp. 1–2, ACM, Würzburg Germany, 2023, ISBN: 978-1-4503-9994-4.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: MxR, UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{gainer_divis_2023,
title = {DIVIS: Digital Interactive Victim Intake Simulator},
author = {Alesia Gainer and Allison Aptaker and Ron Artstein and David Cobbins and Mark Core and Carla Gordon and Anton Leuski and Zongjian Li and Chirag Merchant and David Nelson and Mohammad Soleymani and David Traum},
url = {https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3570945.3607328},
doi = {10.1145/3570945.3607328},
isbn = {978-1-4503-9994-4},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-09-01},
urldate = {2024-02-20},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 23rd ACM International Conference on Intelligent Virtual Agents},
pages = {1–2},
publisher = {ACM},
address = {Würzburg Germany},
keywords = {MxR, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Mozgai, Sharon; Kaurloto, Cari; Winn, Jade; Leeds, Andrew; Heylen, Dirk; Hartholt, Arno; Scherer, Stefan
Machine learning for semi-automated scoping reviews Journal Article
In: Intelligent Systems with Applications, vol. 19, pp. 200249, 2023, ISSN: 26673053.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, VHTL, Virtual Humans
@article{mozgai_machine_2023,
title = {Machine learning for semi-automated scoping reviews},
author = {Sharon Mozgai and Cari Kaurloto and Jade Winn and Andrew Leeds and Dirk Heylen and Arno Hartholt and Stefan Scherer},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S2667305323000741},
doi = {10.1016/j.iswa.2023.200249},
issn = {26673053},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-09-01},
urldate = {2023-08-23},
journal = {Intelligent Systems with Applications},
volume = {19},
pages = {200249},
keywords = {UARC, VHTL, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Yin, Yufeng; Chang, Di; Song, Guoxian; Sang, Shen; Zhi, Tiancheng; Liu, Jing; Luo, Linjie; Soleymani, Mohammad
FG-Net: Facial Action Unit Detection with Generalizable Pyramidal Features Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2308.12380 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@misc{yin_fg-net_2023,
title = {FG-Net: Facial Action Unit Detection with Generalizable Pyramidal Features},
author = {Yufeng Yin and Di Chang and Guoxian Song and Shen Sang and Tiancheng Zhi and Jing Liu and Linjie Luo and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2308.12380},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-08-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Automatic detection of facial Action Units (AUs) allows for objective facial expression analysis. Due to the high cost of AU labeling and the limited size of existing benchmarks, previous AU detection methods tend to overfit the dataset, resulting in a significant performance loss when evaluated across corpora. To address this problem, we propose FG-Net for generalizable facial action unit detection. Specifically, FG-Net extracts feature maps from a StyleGAN2 model pre-trained on a large and diverse face image dataset. Then, these features are used to detect AUs with a Pyramid CNN Interpreter, making the training efficient and capturing essential local features. The proposed FG-Net achieves a strong generalization ability for heatmap-based AU detection thanks to the generalizable and semantic-rich features extracted from the pre-trained generative model. Extensive experiments are conducted to evaluate within- and cross-corpus AU detection with the widely-used DISFA and BP4D datasets. Compared with the state-of-the-art, the proposed method achieves superior cross-domain performance while maintaining competitive within-domain performance. In addition, FG-Net is data-efficient and achieves competitive performance even when trained on 1000 samples. Our code will be released at textbackslashurlhttps://github.com/ihp-lab/FG-Net},
note = {arXiv:2308.12380 [cs]},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Chang, Di; Yin, Yufeng; Li, Zongjian; Tran, Minh; Soleymani, Mohammad
LibreFace: An Open-Source Toolkit for Deep Facial Expression Analysis Miscellaneous
2023, (arXiv:2308.10713 [cs]).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Virtual Humans
@misc{chang_libreface_2023,
title = {LibreFace: An Open-Source Toolkit for Deep Facial Expression Analysis},
author = {Di Chang and Yufeng Yin and Zongjian Li and Minh Tran and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {http://arxiv.org/abs/2308.10713},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-08-01},
urldate = {2024-02-21},
publisher = {arXiv},
abstract = {Facial expression analysis is an important tool for human-computer interaction. In this paper, we introduce LibreFace, an open-source toolkit for facial expression analysis. This open-source toolbox offers real-time and offline analysis of facial behavior through deep learning models, including facial action unit (AU) detection, AU intensity estimation, and facial expression recognition. To accomplish this, we employ several techniques, including the utilization of a large-scale pre-trained network, feature-wise knowledge distillation, and task-specific fine-tuning. These approaches are designed to effectively and accurately analyze facial expressions by leveraging visual information, thereby facilitating the implementation of real-time interactive applications. In terms of Action Unit (AU) intensity estimation, we achieve a Pearson Correlation Coefficient (PCC) of 0.63 on DISFA, which is 7% higher than the performance of OpenFace 2.0 while maintaining highly-efficient inference that runs two times faster than OpenFace 2.0. Despite being compact, our model also demonstrates competitive performance to state-of-the-art facial expression analysis methods on AffecNet, FFHQ, and RAF-DB. Our code will be released at https://github.com/ihp-lab/LibreFace},
note = {arXiv:2308.10713 [cs]},
keywords = {Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {misc}
}
Kappas, Arvid; Gratch, Jonathan
These Aren’t The Droids You Are Looking for: Promises and Challenges for the Intersection of Affective Science and Robotics/AI Journal Article
In: Affec Sci, 2023, ISSN: 2662-2041, 2662-205X.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{kappas_these_2023,
title = {These Aren’t The Droids You Are Looking for: Promises and Challenges for the Intersection of Affective Science and Robotics/AI},
author = {Arvid Kappas and Jonathan Gratch},
url = {https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s42761-023-00211-3},
doi = {10.1007/s42761-023-00211-3},
issn = {2662-2041, 2662-205X},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-08-01},
urldate = {2023-09-20},
journal = {Affec Sci},
abstract = {Abstract
AI research focused on interactions with humans, particularly in the form of robots or virtual agents, has expanded in the last two decades to include concepts related to affective processes. Affective computing is an emerging field that deals with issues such as how the diagnosis of affective states of users can be used to improve such interactions, also with a view to demonstrate affective behavior towards the user. This type of research often is based on two beliefs: (1) artificial emotional intelligence will improve human computer interaction (or more specifically human robot interaction), and (2) we understand the role of affective behavior in human interaction sufficiently to tell artificial systems what to do. However, within affective science the focus of research is often to test a particular assumption, such as “smiles affect liking.” Such focus does not provide the information necessary to synthesize affective behavior in long dynamic and real-time interactions. In consequence, theories do not play a large role in the development of artificial affective systems by engineers, but self-learning systems develop their behavior out of large corpora of recorded interactions. The status quo is characterized by measurement issues, theoretical lacunae regarding prevalence and functions of affective behavior in interaction, and underpowered studies that cannot provide the solid empirical foundation for further theoretical developments. This contribution will highlight some of these challenges and point towards next steps to create a rapprochement between engineers and affective scientists with a view to improving theory and solid applications.},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
AI research focused on interactions with humans, particularly in the form of robots or virtual agents, has expanded in the last two decades to include concepts related to affective processes. Affective computing is an emerging field that deals with issues such as how the diagnosis of affective states of users can be used to improve such interactions, also with a view to demonstrate affective behavior towards the user. This type of research often is based on two beliefs: (1) artificial emotional intelligence will improve human computer interaction (or more specifically human robot interaction), and (2) we understand the role of affective behavior in human interaction sufficiently to tell artificial systems what to do. However, within affective science the focus of research is often to test a particular assumption, such as “smiles affect liking.” Such focus does not provide the information necessary to synthesize affective behavior in long dynamic and real-time interactions. In consequence, theories do not play a large role in the development of artificial affective systems by engineers, but self-learning systems develop their behavior out of large corpora of recorded interactions. The status quo is characterized by measurement issues, theoretical lacunae regarding prevalence and functions of affective behavior in interaction, and underpowered studies that cannot provide the solid empirical foundation for further theoretical developments. This contribution will highlight some of these challenges and point towards next steps to create a rapprochement between engineers and affective scientists with a view to improving theory and solid applications.
Liu, Ruying; Becerik-Gerber, Burcin; Lucas, Gale M.
Effectiveness of VR-based training on improving occupants’ response and preparedness for active shooter incidents Journal Article
In: Safety Science, vol. 164, pp. 106175, 2023, ISSN: 09257535.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Simulation, UARC, virtual reality
@article{liu_effectiveness_2023,
title = {Effectiveness of VR-based training on improving occupants’ response and preparedness for active shooter incidents},
author = {Ruying Liu and Burcin Becerik-Gerber and Gale M. Lucas},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0925753523001170},
doi = {10.1016/j.ssci.2023.106175},
issn = {09257535},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-08-01},
urldate = {2023-08-22},
journal = {Safety Science},
volume = {164},
pages = {106175},
keywords = {Simulation, UARC, virtual reality},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Tran, Minh; Yin, Yufeng; Soleymani, Mohammad
Personalized Adaptation with Pre-trained Speech Encoders for Continuous Emotion Recognition Proceedings Article
In: INTERSPEECH 2023, pp. 636–640, ISCA, 2023.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: Emotions, UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{tran_personalized_2023,
title = {Personalized Adaptation with Pre-trained Speech Encoders for Continuous Emotion Recognition},
author = {Minh Tran and Yufeng Yin and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {https://www.isca-speech.org/archive/interspeech_2023/tran23c_interspeech.html},
doi = {10.21437/Interspeech.2023-2170},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-08-01},
urldate = {2023-08-23},
booktitle = {INTERSPEECH 2023},
pages = {636–640},
publisher = {ISCA},
keywords = {Emotions, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Nye, Benjamin D.; Okado, Yuko; Shiel, Aaron; Carr, Kayla; Rosenberg, Milton; Rice, Enora; Ostrander, Luke; Ju, Megan; Gutierrez, Cassandra; Ramirez, Dilan; Auerbach, Daniel; Aguirre, Angelica; Swartout, William
MentorStudio: Amplifying diverse voices through rapid, self-authorable virtual mentors Journal Article
In: 2023, (Publisher: Zenodo).
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Learning Sciences, UARC, Virtual Agents
@article{nye_mentorstudio_2023,
title = {MentorStudio: Amplifying diverse voices through rapid, self-authorable virtual mentors},
author = {Benjamin D. Nye and Yuko Okado and Aaron Shiel and Kayla Carr and Milton Rosenberg and Enora Rice and Luke Ostrander and Megan Ju and Cassandra Gutierrez and Dilan Ramirez and Daniel Auerbach and Angelica Aguirre and William Swartout},
url = {https://zenodo.org/record/8226275},
doi = {10.5281/ZENODO.8226275},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-07-01},
urldate = {2024-01-11},
abstract = {Mentoring promotes underserved students' STEM persistence but it is difficult to scale up. Virtual agents can amplify mentors' experiences to larger audiences, which is particularly important for mentors from under-represented backgrounds and for underserved students with less access to mentors. This paper introduces MentorStudio, an online platform that allows real-life mentors to self-record and publish video-based conversational virtual agents. MentorStudio's goals are to increase speed, scheduling flexibility, and autonomy in creating intelligent virtual mentors. MentorStudio platform components are introduced, along with initial feedback regarding usability and acceptance collected from 20 STEM mentors who recorded virtual mentors. Overall, the MentorStudio platform has good ease-of-use and acceptance among mentors and offers a platform capable of recording large number of mentors to expand their reach to an unlimited number of students.},
note = {Publisher: Zenodo},
keywords = {Learning Sciences, UARC, Virtual Agents},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Saxon, Leslie; Boberg, Jill; Faulk, Robert; Barrett, Trevor
Identifying relationships between compression garments and recovery in a military training environment Technical Report
In Review 2023.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: CBC, UARC
@techreport{saxon_identifying_2023,
title = {Identifying relationships between compression garments and recovery in a military training environment},
author = {Leslie Saxon and Jill Boberg and Robert Faulk and Trevor Barrett},
url = {https://www.researchsquare.com/article/rs-3193173/v1},
doi = {10.21203/rs.3.rs-3193173/v1},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-07-01},
urldate = {2023-09-21},
institution = {In Review},
abstract = {Abstract
Development and maintenance of physical capabilities is an essential part of combat readiness in the military. This readiness requires continuous training and is therefore compromised by injury. Because Service Members (SMs) must be physically and cognitively prepared to conduct multifaceted operations in support of strategic objectives, and because the Department of Defense’s (DoD) non-deployable rate and annual costs associated with treating SMs continue to rise at an alarming rate, finding a far-reaching and efficient solution to prevent such injuries is a high priority. Compression garments (CGs) have become increasingly popular over the past decade in human performance applications, and reportedly facilitate post-exercise recovery by reducing muscle soreness, increasing blood lactate removal, and increasing perception of recovery, but the evidence is mixed, at best. In the current study we explored whether CG use, and duration of use, improves recovery and mitigates muscle soreness effectively in an elite Marine training course. In order to test this, we subjected Service Members to fatiguing exercise and then measured subjective and objective recovery and soreness using participant reports and grip and leg strength over a 72-hour recovery period. Findings from this study suggest that wearing CGs for post training recovery showed significant and moderate positive effects on subjective soreness, fatigue, and perceived level of recovery. We did not find statistically significant effects on physical performance while testing grip or leg strength. These findings suggest that CG may be a beneficial strategy for military training environments to accelerate muscle recovery after high-intensity exercise, without adverse effects to the wearer or negative impact on military training.},
keywords = {CBC, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {techreport}
}
Development and maintenance of physical capabilities is an essential part of combat readiness in the military. This readiness requires continuous training and is therefore compromised by injury. Because Service Members (SMs) must be physically and cognitively prepared to conduct multifaceted operations in support of strategic objectives, and because the Department of Defense’s (DoD) non-deployable rate and annual costs associated with treating SMs continue to rise at an alarming rate, finding a far-reaching and efficient solution to prevent such injuries is a high priority. Compression garments (CGs) have become increasingly popular over the past decade in human performance applications, and reportedly facilitate post-exercise recovery by reducing muscle soreness, increasing blood lactate removal, and increasing perception of recovery, but the evidence is mixed, at best. In the current study we explored whether CG use, and duration of use, improves recovery and mitigates muscle soreness effectively in an elite Marine training course. In order to test this, we subjected Service Members to fatiguing exercise and then measured subjective and objective recovery and soreness using participant reports and grip and leg strength over a 72-hour recovery period. Findings from this study suggest that wearing CGs for post training recovery showed significant and moderate positive effects on subjective soreness, fatigue, and perceived level of recovery. We did not find statistically significant effects on physical performance while testing grip or leg strength. These findings suggest that CG may be a beneficial strategy for military training environments to accelerate muscle recovery after high-intensity exercise, without adverse effects to the wearer or negative impact on military training.
Gurney, Nikolos; Miller, John H.; Pynadath, David V.
The Role of Heuristics and Biases during Complex Choices with an AI Teammate Journal Article
In: AAAI, vol. 37, no. 5, pp. 5993–6001, 2023, ISSN: 2374-3468, 2159-5399.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Social Simulation, UARC
@article{gurney_role_2023,
title = {The Role of Heuristics and Biases during Complex Choices with an AI Teammate},
author = {Nikolos Gurney and John H. Miller and David V. Pynadath},
url = {https://ojs.aaai.org/index.php/AAAI/article/view/25741},
doi = {10.1609/aaai.v37i5.25741},
issn = {2374-3468, 2159-5399},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-01},
urldate = {2023-12-08},
journal = {AAAI},
volume = {37},
number = {5},
pages = {5993–6001},
abstract = {Behavioral scientists have classically documented aversion to algorithmic decision aids, from simple linear models to AI. Sentiment, however, is changing and possibly accelerating AI helper usage. AI assistance is, arguably, most valuable when humans must make complex choices. We argue that classic experimental methods used to study heuristics and biases are insufficient for studying complex choices made with AI helpers. We adapted an experimental paradigm designed for studying complex choices in such contexts. We show that framing and anchoring effects impact how people work with an AI helper and are predictive of choice outcomes. The evidence suggests that some participants, particularly those in a loss frame, put too much faith in the AI helper and experienced worse choice outcomes by doing so. The paradigm also generates computational modeling-friendly data allowing future studies of human-AI decision making.},
keywords = {AI, Social Simulation, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Leitner, Maxyn; Greenwald, Eric; Wang, Ning; Montgomery, Ryan; Merchant, Chirag
Designing Game-Based Learning for High School Artificial Intelligence Education Journal Article
In: Int J Artif Intell Educ, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 384–398, 2023, ISSN: 1560-4292, 1560-4306.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: AI, Virtual Humans
@article{leitner_designing_2023,
title = {Designing Game-Based Learning for High School Artificial Intelligence Education},
author = {Maxyn Leitner and Eric Greenwald and Ning Wang and Ryan Montgomery and Chirag Merchant},
url = {https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s40593-022-00327-w},
doi = {10.1007/s40593-022-00327-w},
issn = {1560-4292, 1560-4306},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-01},
urldate = {2023-09-20},
journal = {Int J Artif Intell Educ},
volume = {33},
number = {2},
pages = {384–398},
abstract = {Abstract
Artificial Intelligence (AI) permeates every aspect of our daily lives and is no longer a subject reserved for a select few in higher education but is essential knowledge that our youth need for the future. Much is unknown about the level of AI knowledge that is age and developmentally appropriate for high school, let alone about how to teach AI to even younger learners. In this theoretical paper, we discuss the design of a game-based learning environment for high school AI education, drawing upon insights gained from a prior cognitive interview study at a STEM focused private high school. We argue that game-based learning is an excellent fit for AI education due to the commonality of problem solving in both game playing and AI.},
keywords = {AI, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Artificial Intelligence (AI) permeates every aspect of our daily lives and is no longer a subject reserved for a select few in higher education but is essential knowledge that our youth need for the future. Much is unknown about the level of AI knowledge that is age and developmentally appropriate for high school, let alone about how to teach AI to even younger learners. In this theoretical paper, we discuss the design of a game-based learning environment for high school AI education, drawing upon insights gained from a prior cognitive interview study at a STEM focused private high school. We argue that game-based learning is an excellent fit for AI education due to the commonality of problem solving in both game playing and AI.
Tran, Minh; Soleymani, Mohammad
A Speech Representation Anonymization Framework via Selective Noise Perturbation Proceedings Article
In: ICASSP 2023 - 2023 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP), pp. 1–5, IEEE, Rhodes Island, Greece, 2023, ISBN: 978-1-72816-327-7.
Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@inproceedings{tran_speech_2023,
title = {A Speech Representation Anonymization Framework via Selective Noise Perturbation},
author = {Minh Tran and Mohammad Soleymani},
url = {https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/10095173/},
doi = {10.1109/ICASSP49357.2023.10095173},
isbn = {978-1-72816-327-7},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-01},
urldate = {2023-08-23},
booktitle = {ICASSP 2023 - 2023 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP)},
pages = {1–5},
publisher = {IEEE},
address = {Rhodes Island, Greece},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Rodrigues, Patrick B.; Singh, Rashmi; Oytun, Mert; Adami, Pooya; Woods, Peter J.; Becerik-Gerber, Burcin; Soibelman, Lucio; Copur-Gencturk, Yasemin; Lucas, Gale M.
A multidimensional taxonomy for human-robot interaction in construction Journal Article
In: Automation in Construction, vol. 150, pp. 104845, 2023, ISSN: 0926-5805.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{rodrigues_multidimensional_2023,
title = {A multidimensional taxonomy for human-robot interaction in construction},
author = {Patrick B. Rodrigues and Rashmi Singh and Mert Oytun and Pooya Adami and Peter J. Woods and Burcin Becerik-Gerber and Lucio Soibelman and Yasemin Copur-Gencturk and Gale M. Lucas},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S092658052300105X},
doi = {10.1016/j.autcon.2023.104845},
issn = {0926-5805},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-06-01},
urldate = {2023-03-31},
journal = {Automation in Construction},
volume = {150},
pages = {104845},
abstract = {Despite the increased interest in construction robotics both in academia and the industry, insufficient attention has been given to aspects related to Human-Robot Interaction (HRI). Characterizing HRI for construction tasks can help researchers organize knowledge in a structured manner that allows for classifying construction robotics applications and comparing and benchmarking different studies. This paper builds upon existing taxonomies and empirical studies in HRI in various industries (e.g., construction, manufacturing, and military, among others) to propose a multidimensional taxonomy to characterize HRI applications in the construction industry. The taxonomy design followed a systematic literature review in which common themes were identified and grouped into 16 categories. The proposed taxonomy can be used as a foundation for systematic reviews and meta-analyses of HRI applications in construction and can benefit the construction industry by informing the design of collaborative tasks performed by human-robot teams.},
keywords = {UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Aris, Timothy; Ustun, Volkan; Kumar, Rajay
Learning to Take Cover with Navigation-Based Waypoints via Reinforcement Learning Journal Article
In: FLAIRS, vol. 36, 2023, ISSN: 2334-0762.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: CogArch, Cognitive Architecture, UARC, Virtual Humans
@article{aris_learning_2023,
title = {Learning to Take Cover with Navigation-Based Waypoints via Reinforcement Learning},
author = {Timothy Aris and Volkan Ustun and Rajay Kumar},
url = {https://journals.flvc.org/FLAIRS/article/view/133348},
doi = {10.32473/flairs.36.133348},
issn = {2334-0762},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-05-01},
urldate = {2023-08-04},
journal = {FLAIRS},
volume = {36},
abstract = {This paper presents a reinforcement learning model designed to learn how to take cover on geo-specific terrains, an essential behavior component for military training simulations. Training of the models is performed on the Rapid Integration and Development Environment (RIDE) leveraging the Unity ML-Agents framework. This work expands on previous work on raycast-based agents by increasing the number of enemies from one to three. We demonstrate an automated way of generating training and testing data within geo-specific terrains. We show that replacing the action space with a more abstracted, navmesh-based waypoint movement system can increase the generality and success rate of the models while providing similar results to our previous paper's results regarding retraining across terrains. We also comprehensively evaluate the differences between these and the previous models. Finally, we show that incorporating pixels into the model's input can increase performance at the cost of longer training times.},
keywords = {CogArch, Cognitive Architecture, UARC, Virtual Humans},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Chadalapaka, Viswanath; Ustun, Volkan; Liu, Lixing
Leveraging Graph Networks to Model Environments in Reinforcement Learning Journal Article
In: FLAIRS, vol. 36, 2023, ISSN: 2334-0762.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: CogArch, Cognitive Architecture, UARC
@article{chadalapaka_leveraging_2023,
title = {Leveraging Graph Networks to Model Environments in Reinforcement Learning},
author = {Viswanath Chadalapaka and Volkan Ustun and Lixing Liu},
url = {https://journals.flvc.org/FLAIRS/article/view/133118},
doi = {10.32473/flairs.36.133118},
issn = {2334-0762},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-05-01},
urldate = {2023-08-04},
journal = {FLAIRS},
volume = {36},
abstract = {This paper proposes leveraging graph neural networks (GNNs) to model an agent’s environment to construct superior policy networks in reinforcement learning (RL). To this end, we explore the effects of different combinations of GNNs and graph network pooling functions on policy performance. We also run experiments at different levels of problem complexity, which affect how easily we expect an agent to learn an optimal policy and therefore show whether or not graph networks are effective at various problem complexity levels. The efficacy of our approach is shown via experimentation in a partially-observable, non-stationary environment that parallels the highly-practical scenario of a military training exercise with human trainees, where the learning goal is to become the best sparring partner possible for human trainees. Our results present that our models can generate better-performing sparring partners by employing GNNs, as demonstrated by these experiments in the proof-of-concept environment. We also explore our model’s applicability in Multi-Agent RL scenarios. Our code is available online at https://github.com/Derposoft/GNNsAsEnvs.},
keywords = {CogArch, Cognitive Architecture, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Pal, Debaditya; Leuski, Anton; Traum, David
Comparing Statistical Models for Retrieval based Question-answering Dialogue: BERT vs Relevance Models Journal Article
In: FLAIRS, vol. 36, 2023, ISSN: 2334-0762.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Natural Language, UARC
@article{pal_comparing_2023,
title = {Comparing Statistical Models for Retrieval based Question-answering Dialogue: BERT vs Relevance Models},
author = {Debaditya Pal and Anton Leuski and David Traum},
url = {https://journals.flvc.org/FLAIRS/article/view/133386},
doi = {10.32473/flairs.36.133386},
issn = {2334-0762},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-05-01},
urldate = {2023-08-23},
journal = {FLAIRS},
volume = {36},
abstract = {In this paper, we compare the performance of four models in a retrieval based question answering dialogue task on two moderately sized corpora (textasciitilde 10,000 utterances). One model is a statistical model and uses cross language relevance while the others are deep neural networks utilizing the BERT architecture along with different retrieval methods. The statistical model has previously outperformed LSTM based neural networks in a similar task whereas BERT has been proven to perform well on a variety of NLP tasks, achieving state-of-the-art results in many of them. Results show that the statistical cross language relevance model outperforms the BERT based architectures in learning question-answer mappings. BERT achieves better results by mapping new questions to existing questions.},
keywords = {Natural Language, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Rothbaum, Barbara; Difede, JoAnn; Rizzo, Albert; Wyka, Katarzyna; Spielman, Lisa; Reist, Christopher; Roy, Michael; Jovanovic, Tanja; Norrholm, Seth; Cukor, Judith; Olden, Megan; Glatt, Charles; Lee, Francis
Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy Compared to Prolonged Exposure Therapy With and Without D-Cycloserine Journal Article
In: Biological Psychiatry, vol. 93, no. 9, pp. S28–S29, 2023, ISSN: 00063223.
@article{rothbaum_virtual_2023,
title = {Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy Compared to Prolonged Exposure Therapy With and Without D-Cycloserine},
author = {Barbara Rothbaum and JoAnn Difede and Albert Rizzo and Katarzyna Wyka and Lisa Spielman and Christopher Reist and Michael Roy and Tanja Jovanovic and Seth Norrholm and Judith Cukor and Megan Olden and Charles Glatt and Francis Lee},
url = {https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0006322323001622},
doi = {10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.02.088},
issn = {00063223},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-05-01},
urldate = {2023-08-24},
journal = {Biological Psychiatry},
volume = {93},
number = {9},
pages = {S28–S29},
keywords = {MedVR},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Gibson, C. Michael; Steinhubl, Steven; Lakkireddy, Dhanunjaya; Turakhia, Mintu P.; Passman, Rod; Jones, W. Schuyler; Bunch, T. Jared; Curtis, Anne B.; Peterson, Eric D.; Ruskin, Jeremy; Saxon, Leslie; Tarino, Michael; Tarakji, Khaldoun G.; Marrouche, Nassir; Patel, Mithun; Harxhi, Ante; Kaul, Simrati; Nikolovski, Janeta; Juan, Stephanie; Wildenhaus, Kevin; Damaraju, C. V.; Spertus, John A.
Does early detection of atrial fibrillation reduce the risk of thromboembolic events? Rationale and design of the Heartline study Journal Article
In: American Heart Journal, vol. 259, pp. 30–41, 2023, ISSN: 0002-8703.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: MedVR, UARC
@article{gibson_does_2023,
title = {Does early detection of atrial fibrillation reduce the risk of thromboembolic events? Rationale and design of the Heartline study},
author = {C. Michael Gibson and Steven Steinhubl and Dhanunjaya Lakkireddy and Mintu P. Turakhia and Rod Passman and W. Schuyler Jones and T. Jared Bunch and Anne B. Curtis and Eric D. Peterson and Jeremy Ruskin and Leslie Saxon and Michael Tarino and Khaldoun G. Tarakji and Nassir Marrouche and Mithun Patel and Ante Harxhi and Simrati Kaul and Janeta Nikolovski and Stephanie Juan and Kevin Wildenhaus and C. V. Damaraju and John A. Spertus},
url = {https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0002870323000145},
doi = {10.1016/j.ahj.2023.01.004},
issn = {0002-8703},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-05-01},
urldate = {2023-03-31},
journal = {American Heart Journal},
volume = {259},
pages = {30–41},
abstract = {Background
The impact of using direct-to-consumer wearable devices as a means to timely detect atrial fibrillation (AF) and to improve clinical outcomes is unknown.
Methods
Heartline is a pragmatic, randomized, and decentralized application-based trial of US participants aged ≥65 years. Two randomized cohorts include adults with possession of an iPhone and without a history of AF and those with a diagnosis of AF taking a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) for ≥30 days. Participants within each cohort are randomized (3:1) to either a core digital engagement program (CDEP) via iPhone application (Heartline application) and an Apple Watch (Apple Watch Group) or CDEP alone (iPhone-only Group). The Apple Watch Group has the watch irregular rhythm notification (IRN) feature enabled and access to the ECG application on the Apple Watch. If an IRN notification is issued for suspected AF then the study application instructs participants in the Apple Watch Group to seek medical care. All participants were “watch-naïve” at time of enrollment and have an option to either buy or loan an Apple Watch as part of this study. The primary end point is time from randomization to clinical diagnosis of AF, with confirmation by health care claims. Key secondary endpoint are claims-based incidence of a 6-component composite cardiovascular/systemic embolism/mortality event, DOAC medication use and adherence, costs/health resource utilization, and frequency of hospitalizations for bleeding. All study assessments, including patient-reported outcomes, are conducted through the study application. The target study enrollment is approximately 28,000 participants in total; at time of manuscript submission, a total of 26,485 participants have been enrolled into the study.
Conclusion
The Heartline Study will assess if an Apple Watch with the IRN and ECG application, along with application-facilitated digital health engagement modules, improves time to AF diagnosis and cardiovascular outcomes in a real-world environment.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04276441.},
keywords = {MedVR, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
The impact of using direct-to-consumer wearable devices as a means to timely detect atrial fibrillation (AF) and to improve clinical outcomes is unknown.
Methods
Heartline is a pragmatic, randomized, and decentralized application-based trial of US participants aged ≥65 years. Two randomized cohorts include adults with possession of an iPhone and without a history of AF and those with a diagnosis of AF taking a direct oral anticoagulant (DOAC) for ≥30 days. Participants within each cohort are randomized (3:1) to either a core digital engagement program (CDEP) via iPhone application (Heartline application) and an Apple Watch (Apple Watch Group) or CDEP alone (iPhone-only Group). The Apple Watch Group has the watch irregular rhythm notification (IRN) feature enabled and access to the ECG application on the Apple Watch. If an IRN notification is issued for suspected AF then the study application instructs participants in the Apple Watch Group to seek medical care. All participants were “watch-naïve” at time of enrollment and have an option to either buy or loan an Apple Watch as part of this study. The primary end point is time from randomization to clinical diagnosis of AF, with confirmation by health care claims. Key secondary endpoint are claims-based incidence of a 6-component composite cardiovascular/systemic embolism/mortality event, DOAC medication use and adherence, costs/health resource utilization, and frequency of hospitalizations for bleeding. All study assessments, including patient-reported outcomes, are conducted through the study application. The target study enrollment is approximately 28,000 participants in total; at time of manuscript submission, a total of 26,485 participants have been enrolled into the study.
Conclusion
The Heartline Study will assess if an Apple Watch with the IRN and ECG application, along with application-facilitated digital health engagement modules, improves time to AF diagnosis and cardiovascular outcomes in a real-world environment.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04276441.
Liu, Ruying; Zhu, Runhe; Becerik‐Gerber, Burcin; Lucas, Gale M.; Southers, Erroll G.
Be prepared: How training and emergency type affect evacuation behaviour Journal Article
In: Computer Assisted Learning, pp. jcal.12812, 2023, ISSN: 0266-4909, 1365-2729.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: Simulation, UARC
@article{liu_be_2023,
title = {Be prepared: How training and emergency type affect evacuation behaviour},
author = {Ruying Liu and Runhe Zhu and Burcin Becerik‐Gerber and Gale M. Lucas and Erroll G. Southers},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jcal.12812},
doi = {10.1111/jcal.12812},
issn = {0266-4909, 1365-2729},
year = {2023},
date = {2023-04-01},
urldate = {2023-08-22},
journal = {Computer Assisted Learning},
pages = {jcal.12812},
abstract = {Abstract
Background
Video‐based training has been widely adopted by private organizations and public authorities to educate occupants on various types of building emergencies. However, the effectiveness of video‐based training for preparing occupants for building emergencies has not been rigorously studied nor has the impact of emergency type been investigated on training effectiveness.
Objectives
This study examines whether video‐based training is an effective method to prepare occupants for building emergencies and how the effectiveness differs in the context of different building emergencies.
Methods
We simulated fire and active shooter emergencies in a virtual office building and conducted evacuation experiments to examine participants' emergency responses using both objective and subjective metrics. A total of 108 participants were recruited and responded to the fire or active shooter incident with or without video‐based training.
Results and Conclusions
The results revealed that participants with video‐based training more often chose to follow other recommendations when responding to building emergencies instead of simply following others. Results from ANOVA showed that training increased participants' self‐efficacy significantly, especially for those in the active shooter group. Moreover, participants in the active shooter simulation had a higher level of response efficacy than those in the fire emergency simulation. Our results also demonstrated the influence of emergency type on participants' final decisions and considerations of the recommendations.
Implications
Our results suggested that video‐based training is effective in improving participants' emergency preparedness and changing their behaviour patterns to a certain extent such as reducing following behaviour and encouraging safe evacuations. Additionally, statistically significant interactions between video‐based training and emergency types suggested that training effectiveness should be considered in accordance with the emergency type.
,
Lay Description
What is already known about this topic
People can behave differently in different types of building emergencies. Understanding human behaviours in building emergencies is essential for developing emergency preparedness strategies.
Emergency training is important for building occupants and video is a widely used media for emergency training. However, its training effectiveness needs to be evaluated.
What this paper adds
We used virtual environments to investigate evacuation behaviour.
The effectiveness of video‐based training and human responses in building emergencies were studied on both subjective responses and objective measurements.
Video‐based training significantly reduced the occurrence of following behaviours.
The different natures of the fire emergency and active shooter incidents shape the effectiveness of video‐based training.
Implications of study findings for practitioners
Video‐based training can improve building occupants' emergency preparedness to a certain extent.
Emergency training media should be designed considering the influence of emergency type.},
keywords = {Simulation, UARC},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Background
Video‐based training has been widely adopted by private organizations and public authorities to educate occupants on various types of building emergencies. However, the effectiveness of video‐based training for preparing occupants for building emergencies has not been rigorously studied nor has the impact of emergency type been investigated on training effectiveness.
Objectives
This study examines whether video‐based training is an effective method to prepare occupants for building emergencies and how the effectiveness differs in the context of different building emergencies.
Methods
We simulated fire and active shooter emergencies in a virtual office building and conducted evacuation experiments to examine participants' emergency responses using both objective and subjective metrics. A total of 108 participants were recruited and responded to the fire or active shooter incident with or without video‐based training.
Results and Conclusions
The results revealed that participants with video‐based training more often chose to follow other recommendations when responding to building emergencies instead of simply following others. Results from ANOVA showed that training increased participants' self‐efficacy significantly, especially for those in the active shooter group. Moreover, participants in the active shooter simulation had a higher level of response efficacy than those in the fire emergency simulation. Our results also demonstrated the influence of emergency type on participants' final decisions and considerations of the recommendations.
Implications
Our results suggested that video‐based training is effective in improving participants' emergency preparedness and changing their behaviour patterns to a certain extent such as reducing following behaviour and encouraging safe evacuations. Additionally, statistically significant interactions between video‐based training and emergency types suggested that training effectiveness should be considered in accordance with the emergency type.
,
Lay Description
What is already known about this topic
People can behave differently in different types of building emergencies. Understanding human behaviours in building emergencies is essential for developing emergency preparedness strategies.
Emergency training is important for building occupants and video is a widely used media for emergency training. However, its training effectiveness needs to be evaluated.
What this paper adds
We used virtual environments to investigate evacuation behaviour.
The effectiveness of video‐based training and human responses in building emergencies were studied on both subjective responses and objective measurements.
Video‐based training significantly reduced the occurrence of following behaviours.
The different natures of the fire emergency and active shooter incidents shape the effectiveness of video‐based training.
Implications of study findings for practitioners
Video‐based training can improve building occupants' emergency preparedness to a certain extent.
Emergency training media should be designed considering the influence of emergency type.