Abstract | ||
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ABSTRACTSocial interactions in general are multifaceted and there exists a wide set of factors and events that influence them. In this paper, we quantify social interactions with a holistic viewpoint on individual experiences, particularly focusing on non-task-directed spontaneous interactions. To achieve this, we design a novel perceived measure, the perceived Conversation Quality, which intends to quantify spontaneous interactions by accounting for several socio-dimensional aspects of individual experiences. To further quantitatively study spontaneous interactions, we devise a questionnaire which measures the perceived Conversation Quality, at both the individual- and at the group- level. Using the questionnaire, we collected perceived annotations for conversation quality in a publicly available dataset using naive annotators. The results of the analysis performed on the distribution and the inter-annotator agreeability shows that naive annotators tend to agree less in cases of low conversation quality samples, especially while annotating for group-level conversation quality. |
Year | DOI | Venue |
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2020 | 10.1145/3395035.3425966 | ICMI-MLMI |
DocType | Citations | PageRank |
Conference | 0 | 0.34 |
References | Authors | |
0 | 3 |
Name | Order | Citations | PageRank |
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Navin Raj Prabhu | 1 | 0 | 0.34 |
Chirag Raman | 2 | 0 | 1.69 |
Hayley Hung | 3 | 565 | 51.21 |