Interaction Studies

6 found

Year:

Year: 2013, Volume: 14, Issue: 1
  1. Hyun-Hee Heo & Min-Sun Kim, The Effects of Multiculturalism and Mechanistic Disdain for Robots in Human-to-Robot Communication Scenarios.
    This study investigates the effects of cultural orientation and the degree of disdain for robots on the preferred conversational styles in human-to-robot interactions. 203 participants self-reported on questionnaires through a computer-based online survey. The two requesting situations were intended to simulate the participants' interactions with humanoid social robots through an Internet video-phone medium of communication. Structural equation modeling was performed to examine the mediating role of mechanistic disdain between multicultural orientation and conversational constraints. The findings reveal that between the two (...)
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  2. Yoichi Inoue, Waidi Sinun, Shigeto Yosida & Kazuo Okanoya, Intergroup and Intragroup Antiphonal Songs in Wild Male Muellers Gibbons (Hylobates Muelleri).
    Mueller's gibbons ( Hylobates muelleri ) sing both sex-specific and duet songs. These songs are thought to be involved in territory maintenance, as well as the maintenance of pair or family bonds. However, few observational studies have examined how gibbons interact with their neighbors through song in the wild. We have been conducting field observations of wild gibbon groups in northeast Borneo since 2001. In the Borneo Rainforest Lodge (BRL) and Danum Valley Field Center (DVFC) at the Danum Valley Conservation (...)
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  3. Dimitar Kazakov & Mark Bartlett, Evolutionary Pressures Promoting Complexity in Navigation and Communication.
    This article presents results from simulations studying the hypothesis that mechanisms for landmark-based navigation could have served as preadaptations for compositional language. It is argued that sharing directions would significantly have helped bridge the gap between general and language-specific cognitive faculties. A number of different levels of navigational and communicative abilities are considered, resulting in a range of possible evolutionary paths. The selective pressures for, resp. against, increased complexity in either faculty are then evaluated for a range of environments. The (...)
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  4. Eva Maria Luef & Katja Liebal, The Hand-on Gesture in Gorillas (Gorilla Gorilla).
    The gestural repertoire of captive gorillas contains the so-called “hand-on“ (or “pat-off“) gesture in which one animals puts its flat hand on top of another's head, which often leads to cessation of the receiver's previous activity. We investigate the origins of this gesture and developmental aspects of gesture creation. We further analyze gesture form and use in relation to the age of the sender with special consideration of the reaction of the receiver to better explain the function of the hand-on. (...)
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  5. Richard Moore, Kristin Liebal & Michael Tomasello, Three-Year-Olds Understand Communicative Intentions Without Language, Gestures, or Gaze.
    The communicative interactions of very young children almost always involve language (based on conventions), gesture (based on bodily deixis or iconicity) and directed gaze. In this study, ninety-six children (3;0 years) were asked to determine the location of a hidden toy by understanding a communicative act that contained none of these familiar means. A light-and-sound mechanism placed behind the hiding place and illuminated by a centrally placed switch was used to indicate the location of the toy. After a communicative training (...)
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  6. Sebastian Tempelmann, Juliane Kaminski & Katja Liebal, When Apes Point the Finger: Three Great Ape Species Fail to Use a Conspecifics Imperative Pointing Gesture.
    In contrast to apes' seemingly sophisticated skill at producing pointing gestures referentially, the comprehension of other individual's pointing gestures as a source of indexical information seems to be less pronounced.One reason for apes' difficulty at comprehending pointing gestures might be that in former studies they were mainly confronted with human declarative pointing gestures, whereas apes have largely been shown to point imperatively and towards humans. In the present study bonobos, chimpanzees and orangutans were confronted with a conspecific's imperative pointing gesture (...)
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