engaging virtual pedagogical agents (vpas) · wilson, m. (1997). metaphor to personality: the role...

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Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) Agneta Gulz Div. of Cognitive Science (LUCS) Lund University [email protected] Magnus Haake Dept. of Design Sciences, LTH Lund University [email protected]

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Page 1: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents

(VPAs)Agneta Gulz

Div. of Cognitive Science (LUCS)Lund University

[email protected]

Magnus HaakeDept. of Design Sciences, LTH

Lund [email protected]

Page 2: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Adele [ Teacher / Coach ]

Page 3: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Cosmo [ Instructor ]

Page 4: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

EduAgent [ Learning companions ]

Page 5: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Steve [ Instructor ]

Page 6: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Steve [ Team member / learning companion ]

Page 7: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Sam [ Learning companion ]

Page 8: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Characters from ‘FearNot’ [ Learning companions ]

Page 9: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Laura – the Exercise Advisor [ Instructor / Coach ]

Page 10: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

[ Virtual speech therapists ]

Page 11: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Anna (IKEA) [ Virtual assistant / Webbot ]

Page 12: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Sara (Malmö) [ Virtual City guide / Webbot ]

Page 13: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Hanna (Försäkringskassan) [ Virtual assistant / Webbot ]

Page 14: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

The Microsoft Office Assistant (Clippit)

Page 15: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

A central goal of VPAs is to increase learners’ engagement.

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Page 16: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

“Indeed there is intuitive appeal in the argument that if a learning environment or material is found engaging –that is, experienced as involving, interesting or as having impact – it is likely that users will become more active, stay on longer and produce more, which may, in turn,

have effects on learning achievements.”

Citation: Gulz, A. & Haake, M. (2006). Design of animated pedagogical agents – a look at their look. Int. J. of Human-Computer Studies, 64(4).

Page 17: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

“Engagingness in this sense is not to be equated with entertainment. To be entertained by an interface agent does, indeed, imply an important form of engagement,

but one can be engaged on several other grounds as well. The impact that an engaging program has does

not even have to be of a pleasant nature.”

Citation: Gulz, A. & Haake, M. (2006). Design of animated pedagogical agents – a look at their look. Int. J. of Human-Computer Studies, 64(4).

Page 18: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Learner engagement being a central goal, it is surprising how relatively little the (static) visual aspects of VPAs

have been researched.

Static visual aspects: e.g. graphical style, body and face shape, gender, ethnicity, clothes & attributes, colours & textures.

Dynamic visual aspects: e.g. gestures, facial expressions, speech, gaze.

Reference: Gulz, A. & Haake, M. (2006). Design of animated pedagogical agents – a look at their look. Int. J. of Human-Computer Studies, 64(4).

Page 19: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Degree of visual naturalism

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Degree of Humanness

Basic Physical Properties

Graphical Style: Naturalism – Stylization

Graphical Style: Detailed – Simplified

Page 20: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

The topic for this presentation

Degree of naturalism in the visual design of VPAs in relation

to engagability

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Page 21: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Arguments for visual naturalism

The smooth communication argumentThe identification argumentThe believability argument

Arguments against visual naturalism

The false expectations argumentThe problem of representing perfection

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Page 22: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Increased visual naturalism as a means to achieve increased engagement in users

“There is a desire to attain more and more [visually] realistic virtual worlds and characters in computer

games […] One reason which is pointed out very often is the belief that the reduction of the absolute difference

between real and virtual environments leads to an increase of presence and of immersion.”

Citation: Wages et al. (2004). How realistic is realism? Considerations onthe aesthetics of computer games. In Proc. ICEC 2004.

Page 23: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Increased visual naturalism as a means to achieve increased engagement in users

(continued)

Pictorial realism increases involvement and the sense of presence in a digital environment.

Pictorial realism may even be a condition for human co-operation with an animated/virtual agent.

Reference: Welch et al. (1996). The effects of pictorial realism, delay of visual feed-back, and observer interactivity on the subjective sense of presence. Presence, 5.

Page 24: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Increased visual naturalism as a means to achieve increased engagement in users

(continued)

More visually realistic characters-agents may increase the users’ curiosity about the personality of the characters.

Reference: Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at IJCAI-97.

Page 25: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Increased visual stylization as a means to achieve increased engagement in users.

People more easily get involved with, elaborate on, and even project themselves into a character that is not visually

naturalistic. A highly naturalistic character is a visual and socio-emotional fact, which does not leave much

for the user to fill in. A stylized character, on the other hand, invites elaboration by the user, who may fill in

from his/her own personal and subjective experience.

Reference: McCloud, S. (1993). Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. Harper Perennial, NY, USA.

Page 26: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Increased visual stylization as a means to achieve increased engagement in users.

(continued)

The stylized character is, ‘[…] an empty shell that we inhabit.’

Citation: McCloud, S. (1993). Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. Harper Perennial, NY, USA.

Page 27: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Learners were allowed to make a choice between:(i) more naturalistic vs. more stylized virtual

pedagogical agents, as well as between …(ii) strictly task oriented vs. more socially oriented (task-

and-relation oriented) virtual pedagogical agents.

There was a significant correlation between preferences for socially oriented and visually stylized agents.

The theory of McCloud served as a possible framing that could help explain or interpret this result.

Reference: Gulz, A. & Haake, M. (2005). Social and Visual Style in Virtual Pedagogical Agents. In Workshop Proc., UM’05.

Page 28: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Program dummy:Open College Sweden:

Education Online

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Page 29: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Participant utterances on choices and on the two visual styles

‘I prefer these [stylized ones]; there is more left for your own imagination here – you can express your personality or whatever you have inside.’

‘Well, these, the Manga ones, are more for you heart, because they really concern personality.’

‘With these [stylized ones] you can be whoever you like and you don’t have to reveal yourself to people that you don’t know.’

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Page 30: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Furthermore

… 6 out of the 21 participants – 1 choosing a naturalistic and 5 choosing a stylised character – indicated that they with their choice of character made use of the

possibility to look different and/or be different.

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Page 31: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

An interpretation of this result is that a visually stylized character leaves more for peoples imagination and their

projections of a fantasy self into the character.

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Page 32: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

Proposal

Visually stylized characters increase users/learners active participation in terms of intellectual as well as socio-

emotional engagement.

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Page 33: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

However, even if this relation turns out to be general and stable, our conclusion would not be that one

should go for stylized characters only!

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Page 34: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

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Agneta GulzDiv. of Cognitive Science (LUCS)

Lund [email protected]

Magnus HaakeDept. of Design Sciences, LTH

Lund [email protected]

Page 35: Engaging Virtual Pedagogical Agents (VPAs) · Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents:

References

Gulz, A., and Haake, M. Design of animated pedagogical agents – a look at their look. Int. J. of Human-Computer Studies, 64, 6 (2006), 322-339.

McCloud, S. (1993). Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. Harper Perennial, NY, USA.

Wages, R., Grunvogel. S. M., and Grutzmacher, B. How realistic is realism? Considerations on the aesthetics of computer games’. Proc. ICEC 2004, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 3166/2004, Springer-Verlag (2004), 216 225.

Welch, R., Blackmon, T., Liu, A., Mellers, B., Stark, L., 1996. The effects of pictorial realism, delay of visual feedback, and observer interactivity on the subjective sense of presence. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 5, 263-273.

Wilson, M. (1997). Metaphor to personality: the role of animation in intelligent interface agents. Presented at Animated Interface Agents: Making them Intelligent (in conjunction with IJCAI-97), Nagoya, Japan.