Racing heart and sweaty palms: what influences users’ self-assessments and physiological signals when interacting with virtual audiences?

Chollet, M. , Massachi, T. and Scherer, S. (2017) Racing heart and sweaty palms: what influences users’ self-assessments and physiological signals when interacting with virtual audiences? In: Beskow, J., Peters, C., Castellano, G., O'Sullivan, C., Leite, I. and Kopp, S. (eds.) Intelligent Virtual Agents: 17th International Conference, IVA 2017, Stockholm, Sweden, August 27-30, 2017, Proceedings. Series: Lecture notes in computer science (10498). Springer: Cham, pp. 83-86. ISBN 9783319674001 (doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-67401-8_9)

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Abstract

In psychotherapy, virtual audiences have been shown to promote successful outcomes when used to help treating public speaking anxiety. Additionally, early experiments have shown its potential to help improve public speaking ability. However, it is still unclear to what extent certain factors, such as audience non-verbal behaviors, impact users when interacting with a virtual audience. In this paper, we design an experimental study to investigate users’ self-assessments and physiological states when interacting with a virtual audience. Our results showed that virtual audience behaviors did not influence participants self-assessments or physiological responses, which were instead predominantly determined by participants’ prior anxiety levels.

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Chollet, Dr Mathieu
Authors: Chollet, M., Massachi, T., and Scherer, S.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Computing Science
Publisher:Springer
ISBN:9783319674001
Published Online:26 August 2017

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