Do Children Accept Virtual Agents as Foreign Language Trainers?

Activity: Talk or presentationContributed talkunknown

Description

Virtual (animated software) agents can train humans in vocabulary learning. This has been successfully tested with adults and more recently also with children. However, the question of how children perceive a virtual agent training them had not been investigated. Here we invited 25 children to evaluate their perception of a virtual and a human trainer who presented written words in a foreign language on videos; both the human trainer and the virtual agent additionally performed a semantically related gesture for each word. Subjects rated the trainers for features related to gestures and for their “personalities”. Subjects found human gestures better and gave the human trainer higher sympathy scores; however, the overall difference between their perception of virtual and human trainers was not significant.
Period17 Jun 2014
Event titleChild-Robot Interaction @ Interaction Design and Children Conference, 2014 Workshop on Child-Robot Interaction: Social bonding, Learning, and Ethics. 17.06.2014, Aarhus, Dänemark
Event typeConference
LocationDenmarkShow on map

Fields of science

  • 305909 Stress research
  • 102006 Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW)
  • 301401 Brain research
  • 503008 E-learning
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  • 502014 Innovation research
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JKU Focus areas

  • Management and Innovation
  • Social and Economic Sciences (in general)