Main Title |
Embodied communication in humans and machines / |
Other Authors |
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Publisher |
Oxford University Press, |
Year Published |
2008 |
OCLC Number |
228195051 |
ISBN |
9780199231751; 0199231753 |
Subjects |
Robotics--Human factors ;
Human-machine systems ;
Body language ;
Communication--Data processing ;
Kommunikation--(DE-588)4031883-7 ;
Kèorpersprache--(DE-588)4114248-2 ;
Robotteknik ;
Människa-maskin-interaktion ;
Kommunikation--databehandling
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Internet Access |
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Holdings |
Library |
Call Number |
Additional Info |
Location |
Last Modified |
Checkout Status |
ELBM |
TJ211.49.E43 2008 |
|
AWBERC Library/Cincinnati,OH |
06/13/2017 |
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Collation |
xi, 491 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 25 cm |
Notes |
Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Contents Notes |
Introduction to embodied communication: why communication needs the body -- Some boundary conditions on embodied agents sharing a common world -- Toward a theory of embodied communication: self-sustaining wild systems as embodied meaning -- Synchrony and swing in conversation: coordination, temporal dynamics -- The visual perception of dynamic body language -- Mirrors for embodied communication -- The role of the mirror system in embodied communication -- Everything is movement: on the nature of embodied communication -- Communication and cooperation in living beings and artificial agents -- Laborious intersubjectivity: attentional struggle and embodied communication in an auto-shop -- The emergence of embodied communication in artificial agents and humans -- Dimensions of embodied communication -- towards a typology of embodied communication -- Neurological disorders of embodied communication -- Gestural imagery and cohesion in normal and impaired discourse -- Conversational metacognition -- Imitation in embodied communications -- from monkey mirror neurons to artificial humans -- Persuasion and expressivity of gestures in humans and machines -- Implementing a non-modular theory of language production in an embodied conversational agent -- Towards a neurocognitive model of turn taking in multimodal dialog. |