Title
Analyzing The Nature Of Eca Interactions In Children With Autism
Abstract
Embodied conversational agents (ECA) offer platforms for the collection of structured interaction and communication data. This paper discusses the data collected from the Rachel system, an ECA developed at the University of Southern California, for interactions with children with autism. Two dyads each composed of a child with autism and his parent participated in an experiment with two modes: interactions with and without the ECA present. The goal of this work is to assess the naturalness of the data recorded in the ECA interaction. This analysis was carried out using a classification framework with a prediction variable of the presence or absence of the ECA in the interaction. The results demonstrate that it is possible to estimate whether or not a parent is interacting with the ECA using their speech data. However, it is not generally possible to do so for the child suggesting that the Rachel system is eliciting communication data that is similar to that elicited through interactions between the child and his parent.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2011
12TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL SPEECH COMMUNICATION ASSOCIATION 2011 (INTERSPEECH 2011), VOLS 1-5
Embodied conversational agent, multimodal interface, audio-video recording, autism, children's speech
Field
DocType
Citations 
Autism,Computer science,Naturalness,Cognitive psychology,Embodied cognition,Speech recognition,Dialog system,Artificial intelligence
Conference
5
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.49
9
6
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Emily Mower1106259.08
Chi-Chun Lee265449.41
James Gibson350.49
Theodora Chaspari43819.43
Marian E. Williams580.94
Narayanan Shrikanth65558439.23