| Affective sensors, privacy, and ethical contracts |
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Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
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CHI '04 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems
table of contents
Vienna, Austria
SESSION: Late breaking result papers
table of contents
Pages: 1103 - 1106
Year of Publication: 2004
ISBN:1-58113-703-6
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 12, Downloads (12 Months): 88, Citation Count: 7
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ABSTRACT
Sensing affect raises critical privacy concerns, which are examined here using ethical theory, and with a study that illuminates the connection between ethical theory and privacy. We take the perspective that affect sensing systems encode a designer's ethical and moral decisions: which emotions will be recognized, who can access recognition results, and what use is made of recognized emotions. Previous work on privacy has argued that users want feedback and control over such ethical choices. In response, we develop ethical contracts from the theory of contractualism, which grounds moral decisions on mutual agreement. Current findings indicate that users report significantly more respect for privacy in systems with an ethical contract when compared to a control.
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.
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Picard, R. W. and Klein, J. (2002). Computers that Recognise and Respond to User Emotion: Theoretical and Practical Implications. Interacting with Computers, 14(2) (2002), 141--169.
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DARPA SB032-038 TITLE: Integrated System for Emotional State Recognition for the Enhancement of Human Performance and Detection of Criminal Intent. http://www.dodsbir.net/solicitation/darpa032.htm
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Reynolds, C. (2001) The Sensing and Measurement of Frustration with Computers. Master's thesis, MIT.
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Moor, J. H. (1985). What is computer ethics? Metaphilosophy, 28(3) 266--275.
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Cudd, A. (2000). Contractarianism. http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/contractarianism
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Cranor, L. and Reagle, J. (1998). Designing a Social Protocol: Lessons Learned from the Platform for Privacy Preferences Project, in J. K. MacKie-Mason and D. Waterman (eds.) Telephony, the Internet, and the Media. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Mahwah, NJ, 1998.
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Debian Social Contract http://www.debian.org/social_contract
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CITED BY 7
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Colin Puri , Leslie Olson , Ioannis Pavlidis , James Levine , Justin Starren, StressCam: non-contact measurement of users' emotional states through thermal imaging, CHI '05 extended abstracts on Human factors in computing systems, April 02-07, 2005, Portland, OR, USA
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Eric Aley , Trina Cooper , Ross Graeber , Andruid Kerne , Kyle Overby , Zachary O. Toups, Censor chair: exploring censorship and social presence through psychophysiological sensing, Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia, November 06-11, 2005, Hilton, Singapore
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I. Pavlidis , J. Dowdall , N. Sun , C. Puri , J. Fei , M. Garbey, Interacting with human physiology, Computer Vision and Image Understanding, v.108 n.1-2, p.150-170, October, 2007
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