23 Pages

Lecture27

Course: IS 213, Spring 1999
School: Berkeley
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Word Count: 1751

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Social HumanComputer Interaction Marti He arst S MS213, UI De & De lopm nt I sign ve e April 27, 1999 Today q Doe hum s an-com r social inte pute raction diffe r fromhum an-hum inte an raction? Building Automated Agents q C pute scie om r ntists trying to build be vable lie age nts: ratureon pe rsonality ignorethevast psychological lite e pre ntations ne d to berich e assum re se e d ssing and ne d...

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Social HumanComputer Interaction Marti He arst S MS213, UI De & De lopm nt I sign ve e April 27, 1999 Today q Doe hum s an-com r social inte pute raction diffe r fromhum an-hum inte an raction? Building Automated Agents q C pute scie om r ntists trying to build be vable lie age nts: ratureon pe rsonality ignorethevast psychological lite e pre ntations ne d to berich e assum re se e d ssing and ne d sophisticate natural languageproce inte nt inte llige raction e alistic graphics, m m nt, and be ove e havior ne d re The Computer Are Social Actors Research Paradigm q C A: C pute areS AS om r ocial Actors e s, t by Nash, Re ve Moon, Fogg, e al. q Main discove s: rie ocial rule guiding hum s an-hum inte an raction apply S e qually to hum an-com r inte pute raction sponsecan beinvoke in hum using d ans This kind of re ve crudere se ry pre ntations of age ss. ntne A Surve...
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Agents and User InterfacesMarti He arst S MS213, UI De & De lopm nt I sign ve eApril 29, 1999Summary from Last TimeqPe se mto tre inte ople e at ractivecom rs as if pute the we social actors y re q What aretheim plications?sign for de of UI
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%!PS-Adobe-2.0 %Creator: dvips(k) 5.86 Copyright 1999 Radical Eye Software %Title: status.dvi %Pages: 1 %PageOrder: Ascend %BoundingBox: 0 0 612 792 %EndComments %DVIPSWebPage: (www.radicaleye.com) %DVIPSCommandLine: dvips status %DVIPSParameters: dp
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UVA - ENAM - 358
ENAM 358: Guidelines for Group Project Spring 2008, Dr. LittleOverview: For this project, you and 3-4 of your classmates will locate, analyze, and lead your classmates in a 20-minute discussion of a piece of nineteenth-century fiction or non-fictio
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