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60                                             Socially Intelligent Agents

                             machine interaction across a variety of application areas, including education
                             and training, virtual reality assessment and treatment environments, and real-
                             time decision aids in crisis-prone contexts.

                             Acknowledgments

                               The research described in this chapter was supported in part by US Air Force Contract
                             F41624–98–C5032. We would like to acknowledge the contributions of the following indi-
                             viduals to this project: the technical monitor Dr. Michael McNeese of Air Force Research Lab-
                             oratory, Mr. John Billingsley of Psychometrix Associates, Inc., Mr. Bob Shaw of NTI, Inc., Dr.
                             Thomas von Wiegand and Prof. Rosalind Picard of MIT, and Dr. Greg Zacharias of Charles
                             River Analytics, Inc.

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