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conference paper

Modeling dominance effects on nonverbal behaviors using granger causality

Kalimeri, Kyriaki
•
Lepri, Bruno
•
Aran, Oya
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2012
Proceedings of International Conference on Multimodal Interaction, ICMI 2012, Santa Monica, CA

In this paper we modeled the effects that dominant people might induce on the nonverbal behavior (speech energy and body motion) of the other meeting participants using Granger causality technique. Our initial hypothesis that more dominant people have generalized higher influence was not validated when using the DOME-AMI corpus as data source. However, from the correlational analysis some interesting patterns emerged: contradicting our initial hypothesis dominant individuals are not accounting for the majority of the causal flow in a social interaction. Moreover, they seem to have more intense causal effects as their causal density was significantly higher. Finally dominant individuals tend to respond to the causal effects more often with complementarity than with mimicry.

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Type
conference paper
Author(s)
Kalimeri, Kyriaki
Lepri, Bruno
Aran, Oya
Jayagopi, Dinesh Babu  
Gatica-Perez, Daniel  
Pianesi, Fabio
Date Issued

2012

Published in
Proceedings of International Conference on Multimodal Interaction, ICMI 2012, Santa Monica, CA
Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LIDIAP  
Available on Infoscience
December 19, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/98248
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