Affective Minds: Proceedings of the 13th Toyota conference, 1999, Shizuoka, Japan. hardcover 304 p.
内容
目次
Preface. List of Contributors. Organizing Committee of the 13th ToyotaConference. History of the Toyota Conference. I. Keynote Papers. Introductionto keynote papers (N. Miyake, Toyota, Japan). 1. Emotion and socialinteraction: a theoretical overview (M. Toda, Nagoya, Japan). 2. Theanatomical basis of affective behavior, emotion and self-awareness: aspecific role of the right frontal lobe (D.T. Stuss and M.P. Alexander,Toronto, Canada and Boston, MA, USA). 3. Attachments and goals (M. Minsky,Cambridge, MA, USA). II. Emotion and Computation. Section overview (A.Tokosumi, Tokyo, Japan). 4. On the role of embodiment in the emergence ofcognition and emotion (R. Pfeifer, Zurich, Switzerland). 5. Functional modelsof emotion (D.C. Moffat and N.H. Frijda (Glasgow, UK and Amsterdam, TheNetherlands). 6. Goal scheduling and action mode selection done by anautonomous agent on the basis of situational urgency (T. Tsuchiya, Toyota,Japan). 7. Emotional performance (K. Binsted, Tokyo, Japan). III. BrainDamages and Emotional Problems. Section overview (H. Tanabe, Ehime, Japan).8. Behavioural disorder in frontotemporal dementia (D. Neary and J.S.Snowden, Manchester, UK). 9. Serotonergic neurotransmission and defensivefreezing in the conditioned fear stress paradigm (T. Inoue, S. Hashimoto, T.Izumi, Y. Maki, I. Muraki, X.-B. Li, Y. Kitaichi, S. Hashimoto and T. Koyama,Sapporo, Japan). 10. Metalearning, neuromodulation, and emotion (K. Doya,Kyoto, Japan). 11. Emotion and memory in Alzheimer patients (M. Ikeda and E.Mori, Ehime, Japan). 12. Receiving emotional signals and retrieving pastsimilar events: higher-order cognitive dysfunction following damage to theventromedial prefrontal cortex (S. Umeda and M. Kato, Tokyo and Chiba,Japan). IV. Development and Emotion. Section overview (K. Takahashi, Tokyo,Japan). 13. The role of cognition in emotional development (M. Lewis, NewBrunswick, NJ, USA). 14. Imagination and emotion (P.L. Harris, Oxford, UK).15. Implicit self-attachment in Japan: an examination with an implicitassociation test (Y. Uchida and S. Kitayama, Kyoto, Japan). 16. When yourbenefit and mine clash: mental negotiations between selves and others (M.Hirai and K. Takahashi, Tokyo, Japan). V. Applications to Artificial Systems.Section overview (N. Okada, Fukuoka, Japan). 17. Digitally mediatedinteraction: technology and the urge system (J. Grudin, Redmond, WA, USA).18. Evolvable architectures for human-like minds (A. Sloman and B. Logan,Birmingham, UK). 19. Expression of emotion, unconsciousness with art andtechnology (N. Tosa, Kyoto, Japan). 20. Artificial mind and consciousnessmodel for interactive agents (H. Ushida, Y. Hirayama and H. Nakajima, Kyoto,Japan). 21. Reciprocity and its cultural dependency in humancomputerinteraction (Y. Katagiri, Y. Takeuchi, C.I. Nass and B.J. Fogg, Kyoto, Japanand Stanford, CA, USA). 22. Emotion recognition in speech using neuralnetworks (J. Nicholson, K. Takahashi and R. Nakatsu, Kyoto, Japan). 23.Emotion recognition in dialogue (M. Tokuhisa, R. Tokuhisa, K. Inui and N.Okada, Iizuka, Japan). 24. Emergence of emotional behavior through physicalinteraction between humans and artificial emotional creatures (T. Shibata, T.Tashima and K. Tanie, Tsukuba, Japan). VI. Emotion in Society. Sectionoverview (T. Yamagishi, Sapporo, Japan). 25. Spontaneous attention toemotional speech in Japan and the United States (K. Ishii and S. Kitayama,Kyoto, Japan). 26. Theory-of-mind mechanism in personal exchange (G.Coricelli, K. McCabe and V. Smith, Tucson, AZ, USA). 27. Moral decision andinformation aversion (H. Matsushima, Kyoto, Japan). 28. A proposal of acomputational approach to the sociology of emotions and group dynamics (T.Nomura, Nara, Japan). Subject Index.
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