Automatic generation of emotions in tutoring agents for affective e-learning in medical education

Web-based education is particularly appropriate for remote teaching and learning at any time and place, away from classrooms and does not necessarily require the presence of a human instructor. The need for time and place independence is even greater in some cases, such as for medical instructors who are usually doctors that have to treat patients on top of their tutoring duties. However, this independence from real teachers and classrooms may influence negatively the students who may feel deprived of the benefits of human-human interaction. In this paper we describe a novel approach for incorporating affective characteristics into e-learning through an authoring tool. The authoring tool incorporates and adapts principles of a cognitive theory for modeling possible emotional states that a tutoring agent may use for educational purposes. Medical instructors may use this authoring tool to create their own educational characters that will interact affectively with their students in the e-learning environment.

[1]  Kuo-An Hwang,et al.  Assessment of affective state in distance learning based on image detection by using fuzzy fusion , 2009, Knowl. Based Syst..

[2]  Caroline Haythornthwaite,et al.  New horizons for e-learning in medical education: ecological and Web 2.0 perspectives , 2007, Medical teacher.

[3]  Ramón Zataraín-Cabada,et al.  Authoring Neuro-fuzzy Tutoring Systems for M and E-Learning , 2008, MICAI.

[4]  Benedict du Boulay,et al.  Implementation of motivational tactics in tutoring systems , 1995 .

[5]  James C. Lester,et al.  Animated Pedagogical Agents: Face-to-Face Interaction in Interactive Learning Environments , 2000 .

[6]  Thomas Rist,et al.  Adding animated presentation agents to the interface , 1997, IUI '97.

[7]  Maria Virvou,et al.  Mobile education: Towards affective bi-modal interaction for adaptivity , 2008, 2008 Third International Conference on Digital Information Management.

[8]  James C. Lester,et al.  Lifelike Pedagogical Agents and Affective Computing: An Exploratory Synthesis , 1999, Artificial Intelligence Today.

[9]  James A. Elwood,et al.  Demotivation: Affective states and learning outcomes , 2009 .

[10]  James C. Lester,et al.  The persona effect: affective impact of animated pedagogical agents , 1997, CHI.

[11]  Andrew Ortony,et al.  The Cognitive Structure of Emotions , 1988 .

[12]  Mike Larvin,et al.  E-learning in surgical education and training , 2008 .

[13]  Maria Virvou,et al.  Combining Empirical Studies of Audio-Lingual and Visual-Facial Modalities for Emotion Recognition , 2007, KES.

[14]  Maria Virvou,et al.  Creating tutoring characters through a Web-based authoring tool for educational software , 2003, SMC'03 Conference Proceedings. 2003 IEEE International Conference on Systems, Man and Cybernetics. Conference Theme - System Security and Assurance (Cat. No.03CH37483).

[15]  Vlado Glavinic,et al.  Extending Intelligent Tutoring Systems to Mobile Devices , 2008, KES.

[16]  Dominic Faux WEB-BASED LEARNING: PROS, CONS AND CONTROVERSIES , 2007 .

[17]  Martin Van Velsen Towards Real-Time Authoring of Believable Agents in Interactive Narrative , 2008, IVA.

[18]  Maria Virvou,et al.  On Improving Visual-Facial Emotion Recognition with Audio-lingual and Keyboard Stroke Pattern Information , 2008, 2008 IEEE/WIC/ACM International Conference on Web Intelligence and Intelligent Agent Technology.

[19]  Chien-Sing Lee,et al.  Designing an Intelligent Coach for a Collaborative Concept-Mapping Learning Environment , 2008, WBL.

[20]  Peter Brusilovsky Künstliche Intelligenz Adaptive and Intelligent Technologies for Web-based Education , 1999 .

[21]  Cynthia Breazeal,et al.  Affective Learning — A Manifesto , 2004 .