Title
The design of virtual audiences: Noticeable and recognizable behavioral styles
Author
Kang, N.
Brinkman, W.P.
Birna Van Riemsdijk, M.
Neerincx, M.
Publication year
2016
Abstract
Expressive virtual audiences are used in scientific research, psychotherapy, and training. To create an expressive virtual audience, developers need to know how specific audience behaviors are associated with certain characteristics of an audience, such as attitude, and how well people can recognize these characteristics. To examine this, four studies were conducted on a virtual audience and its behavioral models: (I) a perception study of a virtual audience showed that people (n = 24) could perceive changes in some of the mood, personality, and attitude parameters of the virtual audience; (II) a design experiment whereby individuals (n = 24) constructed 23 different audience scenarios indicated that the understanding of audience styles was consistent across individuals, and the clustering of similar settings of the virtual audience parameters revealed five distinct generic audience styles; (III) a perception validation study of these five audience styles showed that people (n = 100) could differentiate between some of the styles, and the audience's attentiveness was the most dominating audience characteristic that people perceived; (IV) the examination of the behavioral model of the virtual audience identified several typical audience behaviors for each style. We anticipate that future developers can use these findings to create distinct virtual audiences with recognizable behaviors. © 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
Subject
Human & Operational Modelling
PCS - Perceptual and Cognitive Systems
ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences
Psychology
Bodily expression recognition
Expressive behavior
Simulated audience settings
Virtual audience
Technology transfer
Attitude parameter
Behavioral model
Design experiments
Expression recognition
Expressive behavior
Scientific researches
Validation study
Virtual audience
Behavioral research
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:990d26d2-c9ee-44fa-860e-61aca731d98f
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2015.10.008
TNO identifier
529729
Publisher
Elsevier Ltd
ISSN
0747-5632
Source
Computers in Human Behavior, 55, 680-694
Document type
article