Dec. 8, 2008 -- Humans may soon be able to develop long-term relationships with virtual humans that are capable of reading and adapting to our emotions, according to French researchers. Catherine Pelachaud, director of research from the Paris Institute of Technology presented her research this week at a meeting of the ARC Network in Human Communication Science in Sydney. Pelachaud and colleagues are developing virtual humans, called Embodied Conversational Agents (ECAs), that can act autonomously in a virtual environment. As well as speaking, the agents communicate with facial expressions, head movements, hand gestures and gaze. Pelachaud and U.S. researcher Justine Cassell developed the first autonomous agents in 1994. Since then the focus has been on making the agents more expressive and more able to read and adapt to the emotions of users. People have high expectations of virtual humans, said Pelachaud, and often lose interest quickly in them because they don't appear to be very "human." Pelachaud hopes to develop agents that maintain the interest of users over a longer term. In one project, called Semaine, the researchers are developing four agents with different personalities. "We've been working on creating distinctive agents," she said. Related Content: How Stuff Works: Virtual Reality Virtual Tools Offer 3-D Access to Organs Discovery Tech for interviews, images and more They are testing how real humans respond when confronted by agents who are variously aggressive, gloomy, energetically positive or pragmatic -- focused on solving problems. Pelachaud said that this is providing basic data for developing agents that could be useful in teaching and medical programs, and for virtual assistants in information kiosks or virtual characters in entertainment. In related research, the researchers are developing an agent that they say can empathize with real humans. For example, a virtual agent on a screen can be taught to detect, via Web cam, the emotion of a person looking at the screen. The agent can then react appropriately. Get More NewsMouse Cloned From Long-Frozen CellResearchers create a mouse from a long-frozen cell. Will the mammoth be next?'Bubble' Could Protect AstronautsScientists say a "bubble" around a Mars-bound spaceship could protect astronauts.Big Reduction of Snowmobiles in Yellowstone ProposedA new plan would cut snowmobile use by 40 percent in Yellowstone.Microbes: Fuel of the Future?A reddish South American microbe is literally breathing fuel, say scientists.DNA Links Remains to Steve FossetDNA tests on two bones found in California confirm they are those of Steve Fossett.Women Carry More Bacteria Than MenSome bacteria prefer women, suggests a new study. But why?Ancient 'Water Monster' Facing ExtinctionA foot-long salamander that was a key part of Aztec legend is threatened by extinction.Grand Canyon's Youth ConfirmedThe Grand Canyon is millions of years younger than previously thought, argue geologists.My Take: E-Voting Not User FriendlyOpinion: Electronic voting machines don't always capture the intent of voters.SLIDE SHOW: Landscapes of TerrorWhat makes a place feel scary? There are scientific explanations.At 40, Brain and Body SlowThe part of the brain in charge of motion starts a gradual slide in middle age.Spiders, Scorpions Among World's Oldest CreaturesMany creepy crawlies have been on Earth much longer than previously believed.Blood-Sucking Vampire Bats Sing DuetsWhite-winged vampire bats "harmonize" with separated roost mates. |
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