Page 270 - Designing Sociable Robots
P. 270

breazeal-79017  book  March 18, 2002  14:27





                       References                                                           251





                       Siegel, D. (1999). The Developing Mind: Toward a Neurobiology of Interpersonal Experience, The Guilford Press,
                       New York, NY.
                       Sinha, P. (1994). “Object recognition via image invariants: A case study,” Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual
                       Science 35, 1735–1740.
                       Slaney, M., and McRoberts, G. (1998). “Baby ears: A recognition system for affective vocalizations,” Proceedings
                       of the 1998 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing.
                       Smith, C. (1989). “Dimensions of appraisal and physiological response in emotion,” Journal of Personality and
                       Social Psychology 56, 339–353.
                       Smith, C., and Scott, H. (1997). A componential approach to the meaning of facial expressions, in J. Russell and
                       J. Fernandez-Dols, eds., “The Psychology of Facial Expression,” Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK,
                       pp. 229–254.
                       Snow, C. (1972). “Mother’s speech to children learning language,” Child Development 43, 549–565.
                       Stephenson, N. (2000). The Diamond Age, Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishers, New York, NY.
                       Stern, D. (1975). Infant regulation of maternal play behavior and/or maternal regulation of infant play behavior,
                       in “Proceedings of the Society of Research in Child Development.”
                       Stern, D., Spieker, S., and MacKain, K. (1982). “Intonation contours as signals in maternal speech to prelinguistic
                       infants,” Developmental Psychology 18, 727–735.
                       Takanobu, H., Takanishi, A., Hirano, S., Kato, I., Sato, K., and Umetsu, T. (1999). Development of humanoid
                       robot heads for natural human-robot communication, in “Proceedings of Second International Symposium on
                       Humanoid Robots (HURO99),” Tokyo, Japan, pp. 21–28.
                       Takeuchi, A., and Nagao, K. (1993). Communicative facial displays as a new conversational modality, in “Proceed-
                       ings of the 1993 ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems (ACM SIGCHI93),” Amsterdam,
                       The Netherlands, pp. 187–193.
                       Thomas, F., and Johnston, O. (1981). Disney Animation: The Illusion of Life, Abbeville Press, New York.
                       Thorisson, K. (1998). Real-time decision making in multimodal face-to-face communication, in “Second Interna-
                       tional Conference on Autonomous Agents (Agents98),” Minneapolis, MN, pp. 16–23.
                       Thrun, S., Bennewitz, M., Burgard, W., Cremers, A., Dellaert, F., Fox, D., Haehnel, D., Rosenberg, C., Roy, N.,
                       Schulte, J., and Schulz, D. (1999). MINERVA: A second generation mobile tour-guide robot, in “Proceedings of
                       the IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA’99),” Detroit, MI.
                       Tinbergen, N. (1951). The Study of Instinct, Oxford University Press, New York, NY.
                       Trehub, S., and Trainor, L. (1990). Rules for Listening in Infancy, Elsevier, North Holland, chapter 5.
                       Trevarthen, C. (1979). Communication and cooperation in early infancy: A description of primary intersubjectivity,
                       inM.Bullowa,ed.,“BeforeSpeech:TheBeginningofInterpersonalCommunication,”CambridgeUniversityPress,
                       Cambridge, UK, pp. 321–348.
                       Triesman, A. (1986). “Features and objects in visual processing,” Scientific American 225, 114B–125.
                       Tronick, E., Als, H., and Adamson, L. (1979). Structure of early face-to-face communicative interactions, in
                       M. Bullowa, ed., “Before Speech: The Beginning of Interpersonal Communication,” Cambridge University Press,
                       Cambridge, UK, pp. 349–370.
                       Tyrrell, T. (1994). “An evaluation of Maes’s bottom-up mechanism for behavior selection,” Adaptive Behavior
                       2(4), 307–348.
                       Ude, A., Man, C., Riley, M., and Atkeson, C. G. (2000). Automatic generation of kinematic models for the
                       conversion of human motion capture data into humanoid robot motion, in “Proceedings of the First IEEE-RAS
                       International Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids2000),” Cambridge, MA.
                       van der Spiegel, J., Kreider, G., Claeys, C., Debusschere, I., Sandini, G., Dario, P., Fantini, F., Belluti, P., and
                       Soncini, G. (1989). A foveated retina-like sensor using CCD technology, in C. Mead and M. Ismail, eds., “Analog
                       VLSI Implementation of Neural Systems,” Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 189–212.
                       Velasquez, J. (1998). When robots weep: A mechanism for emotional memories, in “Proceedings of the 1998
                       National Conference on Artificial Intelligence, AAAI98,” pp. 70–75.
   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   272   273   274   275