Page 268 - Designing Sociable Robots
P. 268
breazeal-79017 book March 18, 2002 14:27
References 249
Mills, M., and Melhuish, E. (1974). “Recognition of mother’s voice in early infancy,” Nature 252, 123–124.
Minsky, M. (1988). The Society of Mind, Simon and Schuster, New York.
Mithen, S. (1996). The Prehistory of the Mind, Thames and Hudson Ltd., London.
Mizuuchi, I., Hara, A., Inaba, M., and Inoue, H. (2000). Tendon-driven torso control for a whole-body agent which
has multi-DOF spine, in “Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Conference of the Robotics Society of Japan,”
Vol. 3, pp. 1459–1460.
Mumme, D., Fernald, A., and Herrera, C. (1996). “Infants’ response to facial and vocal emotional signals in a
social referencing paradigm,” Child Development 67, 3219–3237.
Murray, I., and Arnott, L. (1993). “Toward the simulation of emotion in synthetic speech: A review of the literature
on human vocal emotion,” Journal Acoustical Society of America 93(2), 1097–1108.
Nakatsu, R., Nicholson, J., and Tosa, N. (1999). Emotion recognition and its application to computer agents
with spontaneous interactive capabilities, in “Proceedings of the 1999 International Conference on Multimedia
Computing and Systems (ICMCS99),” Vol. 2, Florence, Italy, pp. 804–808.
Nelson, K. (1993). “The psychological and social origins of autobiographical memory,” Psychological Science
4(1), 7–14.
Newman, R., and Zelinsky, A. (1998). Error analysis of head pose and gaze direction from stereo vision, in
“Proceedings of 1998 IEEE/RSJ International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS98),” Victoria
B.C., Canada, pp. 527–532.
Newson, J. (1979). The growth of shared understandings between infant and caregiver, in M. Bullowa, ed.,
“Before Speech: The Beginning of Interpersonal Communication,” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK,
pp. 207–222.
Niedenthal, P., and Kityama, S. (1994). The Heart’s Eye: Emotional Influences in Perception and Attention,
Academic Press, San Diego.
Nothdurft, H. C. (1993). “The role of features in preattentive vision: Comparison of orientation, motion and color
cues,” Vision Research 33, 1937–1958.
Okada, M., Nakamura, Y., and Ban, S. (2000). Design of Programmable Passive Compliance Mechanism using
Closed Kinematic Chain—PPC cybernetic shoulder for humanoid robots, in “Proceedings of the 2000 International
Symposium on Experimental Robotics (ISER00),” Honolulu, HI, pp. 31–40.
Ortony, A., Clore, G., and Collins, A. (1988). The Cognitive Structure of Emotion, Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, UK.
Otake, M., Inaba, M., and Inoue, H. (1999). Development of gel robots made of electro-active polymer PAMPS
gel, in “Proceedings of the 1999 International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics (IEEE SMC99),”
Tokyo, Japan, pp. 788–793.
Papousek, M., Papousek, H., and Bornstein, M. (1985). The naturalistic vocal environment of young infants: On
the significance of homogeneity and variability in parental speech, in T. Field and N. Fox, eds., “Social Perception
in Infants,” Ablex, Norwood, NJ, pp. 269–297.
Parke, F. (1972). Computer Generated Animation of Faces, PhD thesis, University of Utah, Salt Lake City.
UTEC-CSc-72-120.
Parke, F., and Waters, K. (1996). Computer Facial Animation, A. K. Peters, Wellesley, MA.
Pepperberg, I. (1988). “An interactive modeling technique for acquisition of communication skills: Separation of
“labeling” and “requesting” in a psittachine subject,” Applied Psycholinguistics 9, 59–76.
Pepperberg, I. (1990). “Referential mapping: A technique for attaching functional significance to the innovative
utterances of an african grey parrot,” Applied Psycholinguistics 11, 23–44.
Picard, R. (1997). Affective Computation, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Plutchik, R. (1984). Emotions: A general psychevolutionary theory, in K. Scherer and P. Elkman, eds., “Approaches
to Emotion,” Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, New Jersey, pp. 197–219.

