Page 269 - Designing Sociable Robots
P. 269

breazeal-79017  book  March 18, 2002  14:27





                       250                                                             References





                       Plutchik, R. (1991). The Emotions, University Press of America, Lanham, MD.
                       Pratt, G., and Williamson, M. (1995). Series elastic actuators, in “Proceedings of the 1995 International Conference
                       on Intelligent Robots and Systems (IROS95),” Pittsberg, PA.
                       Premack, D., and Premack, A. (1995). Origins of human social competence, in M. Gazzaniga, ed., “The Cognitive
                       Neurosciences,” Bradford, New York, NY, pp. 205–218.
                       Redican, W. (1982). An evolutionary perspective on human facial displays, in “Emotion in the Human Face,”
                       Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 212–280.
                       Reeves, B., and Nass, C. (1996). The Media Equation, CSLI Publications, Stanford, CA.
                       Reilly, S. (1996). Believable Social and Emotional Agents, PhD thesis, Carnegie Mellon University, School of
                       Computer Science, Pittsburgh, PA.
                       Rhodes, B. (1997). “The wearable remembrance agent: A system for augmented memory,” Personal Technologies.
                       Rickel, J., and Johnson, W. L. (2000). Task-oriented collaboration with embodied agents in virtual worlds, in
                       J.Cassell,J.Sullivan,S.PrevostandE.Churchill,eds.,“EmbodiedConversationalAgents,”MITPress,Cambridge,
                       MA, pp. 95–122.
                       Robinson, D., Pratt, J., Paluska, D., and Pratt, G. (1999). Series elastic actuator development for a biomimetic
                       walking Robot, in “Proceedings of IEEE/ASME International Conference on Advanced Intelligent Mechatronics,”
                       Atlanta, GA.
                       Roy, D., and Pentland, A. (1996). Automatic spoken affect analysis and classification, in “Proceedings of the 1996
                       International Conference on Automatic Face and Gesture Recognition.”
                       Russell, J. (1997). Reading emotions from and into faces: Resurrecting a dimensional-contextual perspective,
                       in J. Russell and J. Fernandez-Dols, eds., “The psychology of Facial Expression,” Cambridge university press,
                       Cambridge, UK, pp. 295–320.
                       Rutter, D., and Durkin, K. (1987). “Turn-taking in mother-infant interaction: An examination of volications and
                       gaze,” Developmental Psychology 23(1), 54–61.
                       Sanders, G., and Scholtz, J. (2000). Measurement and evaluation of embodied conversational agents, in J. Cassell,
                       J. Sullivan, S. Prevost and E. Churchill, eds., “Embodied Conversational Agents,” MIT Press, Cambridge, MA,
                       pp. 346–373.
                       Scassellati, B. (1998). Finding eyes and faces with a foveated vision system, in “Proceedings of the Fifthteenth
                       National Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI98),” Madison, WI, pp. 969–976.
                       Scassellati, B. (1999). Imitation and mechanisms of joint attention: A developmental structure for building social
                       skills on a humanoid robot, in C. L. Nehaniv, ed., “Computation for Metaphors, Analogy and Agents,” Vol. 1562
                       of Springer Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence, Springer-Verlag, New York, NY.
                       Scassellati, B. (2000a). A theory of mind for a humanoid robot, in “Proceedings of the First IEEE-RAS International
                       Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids2000),” Cambridge, MA.
                       Scassellati, B. (2000b). Theory of mind...for a robot, in “Proceedings of the 2000 AAAI Fall Symposium on
                       Socially Intelligent Agents—The Human in the Loop,” Cape Cod, MA, pp. 164–167. Technical Report FS-00-04.
                       Schaal, S. (1997). Learning from demonstration, in “Proceedings of the 1997 Conference on Neural Information
                       Processing Systems (NIPS97),” Denver, CO, pp. 1040–1046.
                       Schaal, S. (1999). “Is imitation learning the route to humanoid robots?,” Trends in Cognitive Science 3(6), 233–242.
                       Schaffer, H. (1977). Early interactive development, in “Studies of Mother-Infant Interaction: Proceedings of Loch
                       Lomonds Symposium,” Academic Press, New York, NY, pp. 3–18.
                       Schank, R., and Abelson, R. (1977). Scripts, Plans, Goals and Understanding: An Inquiry into Human Knowledge
                       Structure, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ.
                       Scherer, K. (1984). On the nature and function of emotion: A component process approach, in K. Scherer, and
                       P. Ekman, eds, “Approaches to Emotion,” Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Hillsdale, NJ, pp. 293–317.
                       Scherer, K. (1994). Evidence for both universality and cultural specificity of emotion elicitation, in P. Ekman and
                       R. Davidson, eds., “The Nature of Emotion,” Oxford University Press, New York, NY, pp. 172–175.
   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274