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Source International Conference on Autonomous Agents archive
Proceedings of the first international conference on Autonomous agents table of contents
Marina del Rey, California, United States
Pages: 451 - 457  
Year of Publication: 1997
ISBN:0-89791-877-0
Author
Clark Elliott  Institute for Applied Artificial Intelligence, School of Computer Science, Telecommunication and Information Systems, DePaul University, 243 South Wabash Ave., Chicago, IL
Sponsors
SIGGRAPH: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques
SIGART: ACM Special Interest Group on Artificial Intelligence
SIGCHI: ACM Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 7,   Downloads (12 Months): 21,   Citation Count: 8
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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
Bates, J.; A. Bryan Loyall; and Reilly, W. S. 1992. Integrating reactivity, goals, and emotion in a broad agent. In Proceedings of the Fourteenlh A~nual Conference of the Cogr~ilive Science Society. Bloomington, IN' Cognitive Science Society.
 
2
Colby, K. M. 1981. Modeling a paranoid mind. The Behavioral a~d Brain Sciences 4(4):515-560.
 
3
Elliott, C., and Ortony, A. 1992. Point of view: Reasoning about the concerns of others. In Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Societtt, 809-814. Bloomington, IN: Cognitive Science Society.
 
4
Elliott, C., and Siegle, G. 1993. Variables influencing the intensity of simulated affecrive states. In AAAI technical report for the Spring Symposium on Reasoning about Mental States: Formal Theories and Applications, 58-67. American Association for Artificial Intelligence. Stanford University, March 23-25, Palo Alto, CA.
 
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Elliott, C. 1993. Using the affective reasoner to support social simulations. In Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 194-200. Chambery, France: Morgan Kaufmann.
 
7
Elliott, C. 19944. MultLmedia communication with emotion-driven 'believable agents'. In AAAI Technical Report for the Spring Sttmposium on Believable Agents, 16-20. Stanford University: AAAI.
 
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Elliott, C. 1994c. Two-way communication between humans and computers using multi-mediaextensions to the IBM PC, and a broad, shallow, model of emotion. Draft of Technical Report in preparation.
 
10
Frijda, N., and Swagerman, J. 1987. Can computers feel? theory and design of an emotional system. Cognition E4 Emotion 1(3):235-257.
 
11
Marquis, S., and Elliott, C. 1994. Emotionally responsive poker playing agents. In Notes for the Twelfth National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAL94) Workshop on Artificial Intelligence, Artificial Life, and Entertainment, 11-15. American Association for Artificial Intelligence.
 
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Nass, C., and Sundar, S. S. 1994. Is humancomputer interaction social or parasocial? Stanford University. Submitted to Human Communication Research.
 
14
Ortony, A.; Clore, G. L.; and Collins, A. 1988. The Cognitive Structure of Emotions. Cambridge University Press.
 
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Reeves, J. F. 1991. Computational morality: A process model of belief conflict and resolution for story understanding. Technical Report UCLA-AI-91-05, UCLA Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.
 
17
Scherer, K. 1993. Studying the emotionantecedent appraisal process: An expert system approach. Cognition E4 Emotion 7(3):325-356.
 
18
Simon, H. A. 1967. Motivational and emotional controls of cognition. Ps3tchological Review 74:29-39.
 
19
Stoman, A. 1987. Motives, mechanisms and emotions. Cognition i.4 Emotion 1(3):217- 234.
 
20
Toda, M. 1982. Man, Robot and Socieqt. Boston: Martinus Nijhoff Publishing.

CITED BY  8