Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play

Theory of mind (ToM) methods were used to investigate children’s interpretations of the social and emotional states of synthetic pedagogical characters, focusing on children’s cognitive and affective empathic responses to characters in bullying scenarios and their social awareness and understa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lynne Hall, Sarah Woods, Marc Hall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Jyväskylä 2009-01-01
Series:Human Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume5/2009/hall-woods-hall.pdf
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spelling doaj-7ff4b0f622cb40e087e5e75bd23af8582020-11-25T01:14:56ZengUniversity of JyväskyläHuman Technology1795-68892009-01-0151688910.17011/ht/urn.20094141411Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-playLynne Hall0Sarah Woods1Marc Hall2Sunderland UniversityUniversity of HertfordshireSunderland UniversityTheory of mind (ToM) methods were used to investigate children’s interpretations of the social and emotional states of synthetic pedagogical characters, focusing on children’s cognitive and affective empathic responses to characters in bullying scenarios and their social awareness and understanding of the characters’ situations. Although cognitive approaches typically do not consider user social awareness and emotional understanding and their roles in interaction, this is critical for our research on empathic engagement. We present a novel approach focusing on story and character comprehension using concepts from ToM methods to understand children’s interpretations of characters within virtual role play scenarios and compare these with an adult perspective. Our results identify that ToM methods offer considerable potential for determining user social awareness and emotional understanding, particularly highlighting that adults and children have different perspectives on how victims and bullies feel.http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume5/2009/hall-woods-hall.pdftheory of mindvirtual role playemotional understandingsynthetic charactersbullying
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lynne Hall
Sarah Woods
Marc Hall
spellingShingle Lynne Hall
Sarah Woods
Marc Hall
Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
Human Technology
theory of mind
virtual role play
emotional understanding
synthetic characters
bullying
author_facet Lynne Hall
Sarah Woods
Marc Hall
author_sort Lynne Hall
title Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
title_short Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
title_full Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
title_fullStr Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
title_full_unstemmed Lessons Learned Using Theory Of Mind Methods To Investigate User Social Awareness In Virtual Role-play
title_sort lessons learned using theory of mind methods to investigate user social awareness in virtual role-play
publisher University of Jyväskylä
series Human Technology
issn 1795-6889
publishDate 2009-01-01
description Theory of mind (ToM) methods were used to investigate children’s interpretations of the social and emotional states of synthetic pedagogical characters, focusing on children’s cognitive and affective empathic responses to characters in bullying scenarios and their social awareness and understanding of the characters’ situations. Although cognitive approaches typically do not consider user social awareness and emotional understanding and their roles in interaction, this is critical for our research on empathic engagement. We present a novel approach focusing on story and character comprehension using concepts from ToM methods to understand children’s interpretations of characters within virtual role play scenarios and compare these with an adult perspective. Our results identify that ToM methods offer considerable potential for determining user social awareness and emotional understanding, particularly highlighting that adults and children have different perspectives on how victims and bullies feel.
topic theory of mind
virtual role play
emotional understanding
synthetic characters
bullying
url http://humantechnology.jyu.fi/articles/volume5/2009/hall-woods-hall.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lynnehall lessonslearnedusingtheoryofmindmethodstoinvestigateusersocialawarenessinvirtualroleplay
AT sarahwoods lessonslearnedusingtheoryofmindmethodstoinvestigateusersocialawarenessinvirtualroleplay
AT marchall lessonslearnedusingtheoryofmindmethodstoinvestigateusersocialawarenessinvirtualroleplay
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