<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Behavior / Human–computer interaction / Embodied agent / Social presence theory / Social psychology / Avatar / Proxemics / Virtual reality / Reality / Virtual world
Behavior
Human–computer interaction
Embodied agent
Social presence theory
Social psychology
Avatar
Proxemics
Virtual reality
Reality
Virtual world

[removed][removed]PERSONALITY Bailenson et al. /AND INTERPERSONAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.recveb.ucsb.edu

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 803,46 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Microsoft Word - camera-ready_its-159_proxemics.docx

DocID: 1sbqj - View Document

Humancomputer interaction / Human communication / Multimodal interaction / Usability / Interpersonal communication / Proxemics / Emotion / Interaction design / Eye tracking

Designing the Unexpected: Endlessly Fascinating Interaction for Interactive Installations

DocID: 1rrrX - View Document

Human communication / Humancomputer interaction / Academia / Interpersonal communication / Nonverbal communication / Semiotics / Environmental psychology / Ethology / Proxemics / Ubiquitous computing / Interaction design / Ambient intelligence

Microsoft Word - its2010-doctoral-consortium_camera-ready.docx

DocID: 1rj3p - View Document

Virtual reality / Human communication / Psychology / Behavior / Personality traits / Interpersonal communication / Ethology / Virtual world / Avatar / Proxemics / Extraversion and introversion

The Expression of Personality in Virtual Worlds Nick Yee, Helen Harris, Maria Jabon, & Jeremy N. Bailenson Stanford University (in press in Social Psychological and Personality Science)

DocID: 1r5BF - View Document

Software / User interface techniques / Humancomputer interaction / Human communication / Computer graphics / Computing / Visualization / Virtual reality / Proxemics / 3D user interaction / Data visualization / Interaction technique

Information Visualization and Proxemics: Design Opportunities and Empirical Findings Mikkel R. Jakobsen, Yonas Sahlemariam Haile, Søren Knudsen, and Kasper Hornbæk Abstract—People typically interact with information

DocID: 1qCfb - View Document