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- research-articleDecember 2023
The Robot-Gender Divide: How and Why Men and Women Differ in Their Attitudes Toward Social Robots
Social Science Computer Review (SSCR), Volume 41, Issue 6Pages 2230–2248https://doi.org/10.1177/08944393231155674Recent developments foretell that social robots will soon become an integral part of everyday life, offering companionship and intimate closeness of different kinds. While research thus far is limited in scope and data, the current research offers two ...
- research-articleJuly 2019
Artificial Intelligence, Artists, and Art: Attitudes Toward Artwork Produced by Humans vs. Artificial Intelligence
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMM), Volume 15, Issue 2sArticle No.: 58, Pages 1–16https://doi.org/10.1145/3326337This study examines how people perceive artwork created by artificial intelligence (AI) and how presumed knowledge of an artist's identity (Human vs. AI) affects individuals’ evaluation of art. Drawing on Schema theory and theory of Computers Are Social ...
- research-articleJanuary 2020
Human-machine communication: what does/could communication science contribute to HRI?
- Chad Edwards,
- Autumn Edwards,
- Jihyun Kim,
- Patric R. Spence,
- Maartje de Graaf,
- Seungahn Nah,
- Astrid Rosenthal-von der Pütten
HRI '19: Proceedings of the 14th ACM/IEEE International Conference on Human-Robot InteractionPages 673–674Although both HRI and Communication Science often trace their origins to the transdisciplinary cybernetics of the 20th century, they have since developed in relative isolation, with scant scholarly exchange concerning the similarities and differences in ...
- short-paperDecember 2018
Encounter, story and dance: human-machine communication and the design of human-technology interactions
OzCHI '18: Proceedings of the 30th Australian Conference on Computer-Human InteractionPages 364–367https://doi.org/10.1145/3292147.3292220John McCarthy and Peter Wright argue that people "don't just use technology;" they "live with it," which drives their decision "to suggest an approach to viewing technology as experience," rather than theorizing people's "experience with technology" [8]...
- ArticleJuly 2006
RFIG lamps: interacting with a self-describing world via photosensing wireless tags and projectors
- Ramesh Raskar,
- Paul Beardsley,
- Jeroen van Baar,
- Yao Wang,
- Paul Dietz,
- Johnny Lee,
- Darren Leigh,
- Thomas Willwacher
This paper describes how to instrument the physical world so that objects become self-describing, communicating their identity, geometry, and other information such as history or user annotation. The enabling technology is a wireless tag which acts as a ...
- research-articleDecember 2005
Design and evaluation of human-machine communication for image information mining
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia (TOM), Volume 7, Issue 6Pages 1036–1046https://doi.org/10.1109/TMM.2005.858383Very large volumes of heterogenous data, like multimedia, Earth observation images, scientific and engineering measurements, for instance, are continuously generated and stored. A typical case is the field of Earth observation. The widespread ...
- ArticleJuly 2005
RFIG lamps: interacting with a self-describing world via photosensing wireless tags and projectors
- Ramesh Raskar,
- Paul Beardsley,
- Jeroen van Baar,
- Yao Wang,
- Paul Dietz,
- Johnny Lee,
- Darren Leigh,
- Thomas Willwacher
This paper describes how to instrument the physical world so that objects become self-describing, communicating their identity, geometry, and other information such as history or user annotation. The enabling technology is a wireless tag which acts as a ...
- ArticleAugust 2004
RFIG lamps: interacting with a self-describing world via photosensing wireless tags and projectors
- Ramesh Raskar,
- Paul Beardsley,
- Jeroen van Baar,
- Yao Wang,
- Paul Dietz,
- Johnny Lee,
- Darren Leigh,
- Thomas Willwacher
This paper describes how to instrument the physical world so that objects become self-describing, communicating their identity, geometry, and other information such as history or user annotation. The enabling technology is a wireless tag which acts as a ...
- articleAugust 2004
RFIG lamps: interacting with a self-describing world via photosensing wireless tags and projectors
- Ramesh Raskar,
- Paul Beardsley,
- Jeroen van Baar,
- Yao Wang,
- Paul Dietz,
- Johnny Lee,
- Darren Leigh,
- Thomas Willwacher
ACM Transactions on Graphics (TOG), Volume 23, Issue 3Pages 406–415https://doi.org/10.1145/1015706.1015738This paper describes how to instrument the physical world so that objects become self-describing, communicating their identity, geometry, and other information such as history or user annotation. The enabling technology is a wireless tag which acts as a ...
- ArticleApril 2002
Making sense of sensing systems: five questions for designers and researchers
CHI '02: Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing SystemsPages 415–422https://doi.org/10.1145/503376.503450This paper borrows ideas from social science to inform the design of novel "sensing" user-interfaces for computing technology. Specifically, we present five design challenges inspired by analysis of human-human communication that are mundanely addressed ...