DocumentCode
1535530
Title
Evaluating humanoid synthetic agents in e-retail applications
Author
McBreen, Helen M. ; Jack, Mervyn A.
Author_Institution
Centre for Commun. Interface Res., Edinburgh Univ., UK
Volume
31
Issue
5
fYear
2001
fDate
9/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
394
Lastpage
405
Abstract
This paper presents three experiments designed to empirically evaluate humanoid synthetic agents in electronic retail applications. First, human-like agents were evaluated in a single e-retail application, a home furnishings service. The second experiment explored application dependency effects by evaluating the same human-like agents in a different e-retail application, a personalized CD service. The third experiment evaluated the effectiveness of a range of humanoid cartoon-like agents. Participants eavesdropped on spoken dialogues between a “customer” and each of the agents, which played the role of conversational sales assistants. Results showed participants expected a high level of realistic human-like verbal and nonverbal communicative behavior from the human-like agents. Overall ratings of the agents showed no significant application dependency. Further results showed participants have a preference for 3D rather than 2D cartoon-like agents and have a desire to interact with fully embodied agents
Keywords
computer animation; electronic commerce; interactive systems; retail data processing; software agents; conversational sales assistants; electronic retailing; human-like agents; humanoid synthetic agents; Animation; Anthropomorphism; Collaboration; Context; Helium; Humans; Lifting equipment; Marketing and sales; Research initiatives; Usability;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Part A: Systems and Humans, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1083-4427
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/3468.952714
Filename
952714
Link To Document