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Kwan Min Lee

Researcher at Nanyang Technological University

Publications -  91
Citations -  4521

Kwan Min Lee is an academic researcher from Nanyang Technological University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Context (language use) & Personality. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 87 publications receiving 3929 citations. Previous affiliations of Kwan Min Lee include Sungkyunkwan University & University of Southern California.

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Can robots manifest personality? : An empirical test of personality recognition, social responses, and social presence in human-robot interaction

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the issue of personality in enhanced human-robot interaction (HRI) using AIBO, a social robotic pet developed by Sony, and found that participants could accurately recognize a robot's personality based on its verbal and nonverbal behaviors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does computer-synthesized speech manifest personality? Experimental tests of recognition, similarity-attraction, and consistency-attraction.

TL;DR: This article found that people exhibit similarity-attraction and consistencyattraction toward unambiguously computer generated speech even when personality is clearly not relevant, and that personality cues in text to speech can be recognized by participants.
Journal ArticleDOI

Are physically embodied social agents better than disembodied social agents?: The effects of physical embodiment, tactile interaction, and people's loneliness in human-robot interaction

TL;DR: Investigation of the effects of physical embodiment in human-agent interaction indicates that lonely people feel higher social presence of social agents, and provide more positive social responses to social agents than non-lonely people.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Designing social presence of social actors in human computer interaction

TL;DR: Both experiments show that matching synthesized voice personality to user personality positively affects users' (especially extrovert users') feelings of social presence, providing strong evidence for human's automatic social responses to artificial representations possessing humanistic properties such as language and personality.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Does computer-generated speech manifest personality? an experimental test of similarity-attraction

TL;DR: When the personality of the computer voice matched their own personality: 1) participants regarded theComputer voice as more attractive, credible, and informative; 2) the book review was evaluated more positively; 3) the reviewer was more attractive and credible; and 4) participants were more likely to buy the book.