Affective computing is an interdisciplinary domain merging computer science, psychology, neuroscience and engineering to create systems that detect, interpret and respond to human emotions. By ...
The keywords assigned to papers by authors in the field of affective computing were analyzed for frequency and co-occurrence, and the core keywords among them were clustered to get five clusters.
Affective computing, proposed by Picard in 1997, aims to endow computational systems with the ability to recognize, interpret, and respond to human emotions. Early studies relied primarily on ...
Rosalind Picard’s research is dedicated to making intangible emotions measureable through “wearable technology” and novel techniques—with applications from autism communication to human-computer ...