The Effects of Interrupting Behavior on Interpersonal Attitude and Engagement in Dyadic Interactions. - Archive ouverte HAL Access content directly
Conference Papers Year : 2016

The Effects of Interrupting Behavior on Interpersonal Attitude and Engagement in Dyadic Interactions.

Abstract

Interruptions frequently occur in dyadic human interaction. In addition to serve as turn-taking mechanism, they may lead to different perceptions of both the interruptee and in- terrupter’s interpersonal attitude, engagement and involve- ment. We present an empirical study to investigate whether different interruption types (i.e. amount of overlap between speakers and utterance completeness) and strategies (dis- ruptive vs. cooperative) in agent-agent interaction have an impact on perceived agents’ interpersonal attitude, engage- ment and involvement. We found that the interruption type has more influence on the perceived attitudes of both agents, whereas by using a cooperative strategy (as opposed to a dis- ruptive one) an interrupter is perceived as more engaged and more involved in the interaction.
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Dates and versions

hal-02412214 , version 1 (15-12-2019)

Identifiers

  • HAL Id : hal-02412214 , version 1

Cite

Angelo Cafaro, Nadine Glas, Catherine Pelachaud. The Effects of Interrupting Behavior on Interpersonal Attitude and Engagement in Dyadic Interactions.. International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems, May 2016, Singapore, Singapore. pp.911-920. ⟨hal-02412214⟩
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