1.
Roy, R., Goatman, M. & Khangura, K. User-centric design and Kansei Engineering. CIRP Journal of Manufacturing Science and Technology 1, 172–178 (2009).
2.
Marc, Hassenzahl, Andrew Monk. The Inference of Perceived Usability From Beauty. Human-Computer Interaction 25, 235–260 (2010).
3.
Jordan, P. W. Human factors for pleasure in product use. Applied Ergonomics 29, 25–33 (1998).
4.
Tractinsky, N., Katz, A. S. & Ikar, D. What is beautiful is usable. Interacting with Computers 13, 127–145 (2000).
5.
Norman, D. Introduction to This Special Section on Beauty, Goodness, and Usability. Human-Computer Interaction 19, 311–318 (2004).
6.
Jordan, P. W. Designing pleasurable products: an introduction to the new human factors. (Taylor & Francis, 2000).
7.
McCarthy, J., J, & Wright, P. Technology as Experience.
8.
Bickmore, T. W., Fernando, R., Ring, L. & Schulman, D. Empathic Touch by Relational Agents. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 1, 60–71 (2010).
9.
Segalin, C., Perina, A., Cristani, M. & Vinciarelli, A. The Pictures We Like Are Our Image: Continuous Mapping of Favorite Pictures into Self-Assessed and Attributed Personality Traits. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 8, 268–285 (2017).
10.
Sefidgar, Y. S. et al. Design and Evaluation of a Touch-Centered Calming Interaction with a Social Robot. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 7, 108–121 (2016).
11.
Turchet, L. & Bresin, R. Effects of Interactive Sonification on Emotionally Expressive Walking Styles. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 6, 152–164 (2015).
12.
Tuch, A. et al. The Role of Visual Complexity in Affective Reactions to Webpages: Subjective, Eye Movement, and Cardiovascular Responses. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 2, 230–236 (2011).
13.
Elkharraz, G., Thumfart, S., Akay, D., Eitzinger, C. & Henson, B. Making Tactile Textures with Predefined Affective Properties. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 5, 57–70 (2014).
14.
Calvo, R. A. & Peters, D. Positive computing: technology for wellbeing and human potential. (MIT Press, 2014).
15.
Russell, J. A. & Barrett, L. F. Core affect, prototypical emotional episodes, and other things called emotion: Dissecting the elephant. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 76, 805–819 (1999).
16.
Petitmengin, C. Describing one’s subjective experience in the second person: An interview method for the science of consciousness. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 5, 229–269 (2006).
17.
Boehner, K., DePaula, R., Dourish, P. & Sengers, P. How emotion is made and measured. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 65, 275–291 (2007).
18.
Isbister, K., Höök, K., Laaksolahti, J. & Sharp, M. The sensual evaluation instrument: Developing a trans-cultural self-report measure of affect. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 65, 315–328 (2007).
19.
Hudlicka, E. To feel or not to feel: The role of affect in human–computer interaction. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 59, 1–32 (2003).
20.
Bitbol, M. & Petitmengin, C. A Defense of Introspection from Within. 8, 269–279 (2013).
21.
Petitmengin, C. & Lachaux, J.-P. Microcognitive science: bridging experiential and neuronal microdynamics. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7, (27AD).
22.
Petreca, B., Baurley, S. & Bianchi-Berthouze, N. How do designers feel textiles? in 2015 International Conference on Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (ACII) 982–987 (IEEE, 2015). doi:10.1109/ACII.2015.7344695.
23.
Ekman, P. What Scientists Who Study Emotion Agree About. Perspectives on Psychological Science 11, 31–34 (2016).
24.
D’ Mello, S. K. On the Influence of an Iterative Affect Annotation Approach on Inter-Observer and Self-Observer Reliability. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 7, 136–149 (2016).
25.
Harmon-Jones, C., Bastian, B. & Harmon-Jones, E. The Discrete Emotions Questionnaire: A New Tool for Measuring State Self-Reported Emotions. PLOS ONE 11, (2016).
26.
Obrist, M., Seah, S. A. & Subramanian, S. Talking about tactile experiences. in Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - CHI ’13 1659–1668 (ACM Press, 2013). doi:10.1145/2470654.2466220.
27.
Küster, D. & Kappas, A. Measuring Emotions Online: Expression and Physiology. in Cyberemotions (ed. Holyst, J. A.) 71–93 (Springer International Publishing, 2017). doi:10.1007/978-3-319-43639-5_5.
28.
Mauss, I. B. & Robinson, M. D. Measures of emotion: A review. Cognition & Emotion 23, 209–237 (2009).
29.
Kroupi, E., Vesin, J.-M. & Ebrahimi, T. Subject-Independent Odor Pleasantness Classification Using Brain and Peripheral Signals. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 7, 422–434 (2016).
30.
Nardelli, M., Valenza, G., Greco, A., Lanata, A. & Scilingo, E. P. Recognizing Emotions Induced by Affective Sounds through Heart Rate Variability. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 6, 385–394 (2015).
31.
Kusserow, M., Amft, O. & Troster, G. Modeling arousal phases in daily living using wearable sensors. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 4, 93–105 (2013).
32.
van der Zwaag, M. D., Janssen, J. H. & Westerink, J. H. D. M. Directing Physiology and Mood through Music: Validation of an Affective Music Player. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 4, 57–68.
33.
Abdelrahman, Y., Velloso, E., Dingler, T., Schmidt, A. & Vetere, F. Cognitive Heat. Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies 1, 1–20 (2017).
34.
Gao, Y., Bianchi-Berthouze, N. & Meng, H. What Does Touch Tell Us about Emotions in Touchscreen-Based Gameplay? ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction 19, 1–30 (2012).
35.
Hertenstein, M. J., Holmes, R., McCullough, M. & Keltner, D. The communication of emotion via touch. Emotion 9, 566–573 (2009).
36.
Aviezer, H., Trope, Y. & Todorov, A. Body Cues, Not Facial Expressions, Discriminate Between Intense Positive and Negative Emotions. Science 338, 1225–1229 (2012).
37.
Kleinsmith, A. & Bianchi-Berthouze, N. Affective Body Expression Perception and Recognition: A Survey. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 4, 15–33 (2013).
38.
Huisman, G., Darriba Frederiks, A., Van Dijk, B., Hevlen, D. & Krose, B. The TaSSt: Tactile sleeve for social touch. in 2013 World Haptics Conference (WHC) 211–216 (IEEE, 2013). doi:10.1109/WHC.2013.6548410.
39.
Vinciarelli, A. et al. Bridging the Gap between Social Animal and Unsocial Machine: A Survey of Social Signal Processing. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 3, 69–87 (2012).
40.
Vinciarelli, A. & Mohammadi, G. A Survey of Personality Computing. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 5, 273–291 (2014).
41.
Gallace, A. & Spence, C. The science of interpersonal touch: An overview. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 34, 246–259 (2010).
42.
Clore, G. L. & Palmer, J. Affective guidance of intelligent agents: How emotion controls cognition. Cognitive Systems Research 10, 21–30 (2009).
43.
Clore, G. L., Schiller, A. J. & Shaked, A. Affect and cognition: three principles. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 19, 78–82 (2018).
44.
Andrew Ortony, Donald A. Norman, & William Revelle. Affect and Proto-Affect in Effective Functioning. in Who Needs Emotions? (eds. Fellous, J.-M. & Arbib, M. A.) 173–202 (Oxford University Press, 2005). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195166194.003.0007.
45.
Chandler, J. & Schwarz, N. How extending your middle finger affects your perception of others: Learned movements influence concept accessibility. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 45, 123–128 (2009).
46.
Tajadura-Jiménez, A. et al. As Light as your Footsteps. in Proceedings of the 33rd Annual ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems - CHI ’15 2943–2952 (ACM Press, 2015). doi:10.1145/2702123.2702374.
47.
Janssen, J. H., Bailenson, J. N., IJsselsteijn, W. A. & Westerink, J. H. D. M. Intimate Heartbeats: Opportunities for Affective Communication Technology. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 1, 72–80 (2010).
48.
Clore, G. L., Schiller, A. J. & Shaked, A. Affect and cognition: three principles. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 19, 78–82 (2018).
49.
Critchley, H. D. & Garfinkel, S. N. The influence of physiological signals on cognition. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 19, 13–18 (2018).
50.
Poppa, T. & Bechara, A. The somatic marker hypothesis: revisiting the role of the ‘body-loop’ in decision-making. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 19, 61–66 (2018).
51.
Fanselow, M. S. Emotion, motivation and function. Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences 19, 105–109 (2018).
52.
Forgas, J. P. Mood Effects on Cognition: Affective Influences on the Content and Process of Information Processing and Behavior. in Emotions and Affect in Human Factors and Human-Computer Interaction 89–122 (Elsevier, 2017). doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-801851-4.00003-3.
53.
Sauter, D. A. The Nonverbal Communication of Positive Emotions: An Emotion Family Approach. Emotion Review 9, 222–234 (2017).
54.
Politou, E., Alepis, E. & Patsakis, C. A survey on mobile affective computing. Computer Science Review 25, 79–100 (2017).
55.
DMello, S. K., Dowell, N. & Graesser, A. Unimodal and Multimodal Human Perceptionof Naturalistic Non-Basic Affective Statesduring Human-Computer Interactions. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 4, 452–465 (2013).
56.
Gruebler, A. & Suzuki, K. Design of a Wearable Device for Reading Positive Expressions from Facial EMG Signals. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 5, 227–237 (2014).
57.
Wac, K. & Tsiourti, C. Ambulatory Assessment of Affect: Survey of Sensor Systems for Monitoring of Autonomic Nervous Systems Activation in Emotion. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 5, 251–272 (2014).
58.
Beale, R. & Creed, C. Affective interaction: How emotional agents affect users. International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 67, 755–776 (2009).
59.
Spadafora, M., Chahuneau, V., Martelaro, N., Sirkin, D. & Ju, W. Designing the Behavior of Interactive Objects. in Proceedings of the TEI ’16: Tenth International Conference on Tangible, Embedded, and Embodied Interaction - TEI ’16 70–77 (ACM Press, 2016). doi:10.1145/2839462.2839502.
60.
Hamacher, A., Bianchi-Berthouze, N., Pipe, A. G. & Eder, K. Believing in BERT: Using expressive communication to enhance trust and counteract operational error in physical Human-robot interaction. in 2016 25th IEEE International Symposium on Robot and Human Interactive Communication (RO-MAN) 493–500 (IEEE, 2016). doi:10.1109/ROMAN.2016.7745163.
61.
Coeckelbergh, M. Are Emotional Robots Deceptive? IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 3, 388–393 (2012).
62.
Liu, K., Tolins, J., Fox Tree, J. E., Neff, M. & Walker, M. A. Two Techniques for Assessing Virtual Agent Personality. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 7, 94–105 (2016).
63.
Cerekovic, A., Aran, O. & Gatica-Perez, D. Rapport with Virtual Agents: What Do Human Social Cues and Personality Explain? IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 8, 382–395 (2017).
64.
Stanton, C. J. & Stevens, C. J. Don’t Stare at Me: The Impact of a Humanoid Robot’s Gaze upon Trust During a Cooperative Human–Robot Visual Task. International Journal of Social Robotics 9, 745–753 (2017).
65.
Kamide, H. & Arai, T. Perceived Comfortableness of Anthropomorphized Robots in U.S. and Japan. International Journal of Social Robotics 9, 537–543 (2017).
66.
Hirano, T. et al. How Do Communication Cues Change Impressions of Human–Robot Touch Interaction? International Journal of Social Robotics 10, 21–31 (2018).
67.
Rosenthal-von der Pütten, A. M. & Krämer, N. C. Individuals’ Evaluations of and Attitudes Towards Potentially Uncanny Robots. International Journal of Social Robotics 7, 799–824 (2015).
68.
Hutson, S., Lim, S. L., Bentley, P. J., Bianchi-Berthouze, N. & Bowling, A. Investigating the Suitability of Social Robots for the Wellbeing of the Elderly. in Affective Computing and Intelligent Interaction (eds. D’Mello, S., Graesser, A., Schuller, B. & Martin, J.-C.) vol. 6974 578–587 (Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011).
69.
Gratch, J. & Marsella, S. A domain-independent framework for modeling emotion. Cognitive Systems Research 5, 269–306 (2004).
70.
Marsella, S. C. & Gratch, J. EMA: A process model of appraisal dynamics. Cognitive Systems Research 10, 70–90 (2009).
71.
Hudlicka, E. Computational Modeling of Cognition–Emotion Interactions: Theoretical and Practical Relevance for Behavioral Healthcare. in Emotions and Affect in Human Factors and Human-Computer Interaction 383–436 (Elsevier, 2017). doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-801851-4.00016-1.
72.
Jeon, M. Emotions in Driving. in Emotions and Affect in Human Factors and Human-Computer Interaction 437–474 (Elsevier, 2017). doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-801851-4.00017-3.
73.
Segalin, C., Perina, A., Cristani, M. & Vinciarelli, A. The Pictures We Like Are Our Image: Continuous Mapping of Favorite Pictures into Self-Assessed and Attributed Personality Traits. IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing 8, 268–285 (2017).
74.
Pessoa, L. Do Intelligent Robots Need Emotion? Trends in Cognitive Sciences 21, 817–819.