|
ABSTRACT
Blinking is one of the most important cues for forming person impressions. We focus on the eye blinking rate of avatars and investigate its effect on viewer subjective impressions. Two experiments are conducted. The stimulus avatars included humans with generic reality (male and female), cartoon-style humans (male and female), animals, and unidentified life forms that were presented as a 20-second animation with various blink rates: 9, 12, 18, 24 and 36 blinks/min. Subjects rated their impressions of the presented stimulus avatars on a seven-point semantic differential scale. The results showed a significant effect of the avatar's blinking on viewer impressions and it was larger with the human-style avatars than the others. The results also lead to several implications and guidelines for the design of avatar representation. Blink animation of 18 blinks/min with a human-style avatar produces the friendliest impression. The higher blink rates, i.e., 36 blinks/min, give inactive impressions while the lower blink rates, i.e., 9 blinks/min, give intelligent impressions. Through these results, guidelines are derived for managing attractiveness of avatar by changing the avatar's blinking rate.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
Argyle, M., Lefebvre, L., and Cook, M. The meaning of five patterns of gaze. European Journal of Social Psychology, 4, 125--136 (1974).
|
| |
2
|
Baylor, A. L. The impact of pedagogical agent image on affective outcome. In Proc. Workshop on Affective Interactions: Computers in the Affective Loop, International Conference on Intelligent User Interfaces, (2005).
|
 |
3
|
|
| |
4
|
Cook, M. and Smith, J. M. C. The role of gaze in impression formation. British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 14, 19--25 (1975).
|
| |
5
|
Ekman, P., Friesen, W. V., and Ellsworth, P. Emotion in the human face: guide-lines for research and an integration of findings. New York Pergamon Press (1972).
|
 |
6
|
Atsushi Fukayama , Takehiko Ohno , Naoki Mukawa , Minako Sawaki , Norihiro Hagita, Messages embedded in gaze of interface agents --- impression management with agent's gaze, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems: Changing our world, changing ourselves, April 20-25, 2002, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA
[doi> 10.1145/503376.503385]
|
 |
7
|
Maia Garau , Mel Slater , Simon Bee , Martina Angela Sasse, The impact of eye gaze on communication using humanoid avatars, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, p.309-316, March 2001, Seattle, Washington, United States
[doi> 10.1145/365024.365121]
|
 |
8
|
Maia Garau , Mel Slater , Vinoba Vinayagamoorthy , Andrea Brogni , Anthony Steed , M. Angela Sasse, The impact of avatar realism and eye gaze control on perceived quality of communication in a shared immersive virtual environment, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems, April 05-10, 2003, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, USA
[doi> 10.1145/642611.642703]
|
| |
9
|
Harrigan, J. A. and O'Connell, D. M. How do you look when feeling anxious? Facial display of anxiety. Personality and Individual Differences, 21, 205--212 (1996).
|
| |
10
|
Harris, C. S., Thackray, R. I., and Shoenberger, R. W. Blink rate as a function of induced muscular tension and manifest anxiety. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 22, 155--160 (1966).
|
| |
11
|
Hess, E. H. The tell-tale eye: how your eyes reveal hidden thoughts and emotions. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold (1975).
|
| |
12
|
Itti, L., Dhavale, N., and Pighin, F. Realistic avatar eye and head animation using a neurobiological model of visual attention. In Proc. SPIE, 5200, 64--78 (2003).
|
| |
13
|
Kawano, S. and Kurokawa, T. Facial and head movements of a sign interpreter and their application to Japanese sign animation. ICCHP 2004, 3118, 1172--1177 (2004).
|
 |
14
|
|
| |
15
|
Mori, M. Bukimi no tani {The uncanny valley}. Energy, 7(4), 33--35 (1970).
|
| |
16
|
Nowak, K. L. and Rauh, C. The influence of the avatar on online perceptions of anthropomorphism, androgyny, credibility, homophily, and attraction. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 11 (1), 153--178 (2005).
|
| |
17
|
Omori, Y. and Miyata, Y. Eyeblinks in formation of impressions. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 83(2), 591--594 (1996).
|
| |
18
|
Omori, Y. and Miyata, Y. Estimates of impressions based on frequency of blinking. Social Behavior and Personality, 29(2), 159--167 (2001).
|
| |
19
|
Osgood, C. E. The nature and measurement of meaning. Psychological Bulletin, 49(3), 197--237 (1952).
|
 |
20
|
Salvatore Parise , Sara Kiesler , Lee Sproull , Keith Waters, My partner is a real dog: cooperation with social agents, Proceedings of the 1996 ACM conference on Computer supported cooperative work, p.399-408, November 16-20, 1996, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
[doi> 10.1145/240080.240351]
|
| |
21
|
Patterson, M. L., Churchill, M. E., Burger, G. K., and Powell, J. L. Verbal and nonverbal modality effects on impressions of political candidates: analysis from the 1984 presidential debates. Communication Monographs, 59, 231--242 (1992).
|
| |
22
|
Pelachaud, C., Badler, N. I., and Steedman, M. Generating facial expressions for speech. Cognitive Science, 20(1), 1--46 (1996).
|
 |
23
|
|
| |
24
|
|
| |
25
|
Stass, J. W. and Willis, F. N. Eye contact, pupil dilation and personal preference. Psychonomic Science, 7, 375--376 (1967).
|
| |
26
|
Stern, J. A., Walrath, L. C., and Goldstein, R. The endogenous eyeblink. Psychophysiology, 21(1), 22--33 (1984).
|
| |
27
|
Shioiri, T., Someya, T., Helmeste, D., and Tang, S. W. Misinterpretation of facial expression: a cross-cultural study. Psychiatry Clinical Neuroscience, 53(1), 45--50 (1999).
|
| |
28
|
|
 |
29
|
Janet H. Walker , Lee Sproull , R. Subramani, Using a human face in an interface, Proceedings of the SIGCHI conference on Human factors in computing systems: celebrating interdependence, p.85-91, April 24-28, 1994, Boston, Massachusetts, United States
[doi> 10.1145/191666.191708]
|
 |
30
|
|
 |
31
|
|
|