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Justine Cassell

Researcher at Carnegie Mellon University

Publications -  172
Citations -  14425

Justine Cassell is an academic researcher from Carnegie Mellon University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gesture & Conversation. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 163 publications receiving 13611 citations. Previous affiliations of Justine Cassell include Massachusetts Institute of Technology & Trinity College, Dublin.

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Embodied conversational agents

TL;DR: Embodied conversational agents as mentioned in this paper are computer-generated cartoonlike characters that demonstrate many of the same properties as humans in face-to-face conversation, including the ability to produce and respond to verbal and nonverbal communication.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

BEAT: the Behavior Expression Animation Toolkit

TL;DR: The Behavior Expression Animation Toolkit (BEAT) as discussed by the authors allows animators to input typed text that they wish to be spoken by an animated human figure, and to obtain as output appropriate and synchronized nonverbal behaviors and synthesized speech in a form that can be sent to a number of different animation systems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Animated conversation: rule-based generation of facial expression, gesture & spoken intonation for multiple conversational agents

TL;DR: An implemented system which automatically generates and animates conversations between multiple human-like agents with appropriate and synchronized speech, intonation, facial expressions, and hand gestures is described.
Proceedings Article

From Barbie to Mortal Kombat: gender and computer games

TL;DR: From Barbie(R) to Mortal Kombat explore how assumptions about gender, games, and technology shape the design, development, and marketing of games as industry seeks to build the girl market.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Embodiment in conversational interfaces: Rea

TL;DR: It is argued that the only way to fullymodel the richness of human I&+ to-face communication is torely on conversational analysis that describes sets of conversational behaviors as fi~lfilling conversational functions, both interactional and propositional.