Literature DB >> 26780808

Effects of Virtual Human Appearance Fidelity on Emotion Contagion in Affective Inter-Personal Simulations.

Matias Volante, Sabarish V Babu, Himanshu Chaturvedi, Nathan Newsome, Elham Ebrahimi, Tania Roy, Shaundra B Daily, Tracy Fasolino.   

Abstract

Realistic versus stylized depictions of virtual humans in simulated inter-personal situations and their ability to elicit emotional responses in users has been an open question for artists and researchers alike. We empirically evaluated the effects of near visually realistic vs. non-realistic stylized appearance of virtual humans on the emotional response of participants in a medical virtual reality system that was designed to educate users in recognizing the signs and symptoms of patient deterioration. In a between-subjects experiment protocol, participants interacted with one of three different appearances of a virtual patient, namely visually realistic, cartoon-shaded and charcoal-sketch like conditions in a mixed reality simulation. Emotional impact were measured via a combination of quantitative objective measures were gathered using skin Electrodermal Activity (EDA) sensors, and quantitative subjective measures such as the Differential Emotion Survey (DES IV), Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS), and Social Presence questionnaire. The emotional states of the participants were analyzed across four distinct time steps during which the medical condition of the virtual patient deteriorated (an emotionally stressful interaction), and were contrasted to a baseline affective state. Objective EDA results showed that in all three conditions, male participants exhibited greater levels of arousal as compared to female participants. We found that negative affect levels were significantly lower in the visually realistic condition, as compared to the stylized appearance conditions. Furthermore, in emotional dimensions of interest-excitement, surprise, anger, fear and guilt participants in all conditions responded similarly. However, in social emotional constructs of shyness, presence, perceived personality, and enjoyment-joy, we found that participants responded differently in the visually realistic condition as compared to the cartoon and sketch conditions. Our study suggests that virtual human appearance can affect not only critical emotional reactions in affective inter-personal training scenarios. but also users' perceptions of personality and social characteristic of the virtual interlocutors.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 26780808     DOI: 10.1109/TVCG.2016.2518158

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph        ISSN: 1077-2626            Impact factor:   4.579


  4 in total

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Journal:  Smart Health (Amst)       Date:  2020-11-13

2.  Designing Empathic Virtual Agents: Manipulating Animation, Voice, Rendering, and Empathy to Create Persuasive Agents.

Authors:  Dhaval Parmar; Stefan Olafsson; Dina Utami; Prasanth Murali; Timothy Bickmore
Journal:  Auton Agent Multi Agent Syst       Date:  2022-02-22       Impact factor: 1.431

3.  Work Emotion Intervention and Guidance Training Method for Enterprise Employees Based on Virtual Reality.

Authors:  Lixun Zhu
Journal:  Occup Ther Int       Date:  2022-06-06       Impact factor: 1.565

4.  From Robot to Virtual Doppelganger: Impact of Visual Fidelity of Avatars Controlled in Third-Person Perspective on Embodiment and Behavior in Immersive Virtual Environments.

Authors:  Geoffrey Gorisse; Olivier Christmann; Samory Houzangbe; Simon Richir
Journal:  Front Robot AI       Date:  2019-02-18
  4 in total

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