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Microexpressions in digital humans: perceived affect, sincerity, and trustworthiness

Aliya Tastemirova, Johannes Schneider, Leona Chandra Kruse, Simon Heinzle, Jan vom Brocke

2022Electronic Markets26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Digital agents with human-like characteristics have become ubiquitous in our society and are increasingly relevant in commercial applications. While some of them closely resemble humans in appearance (e.g., digital humans), they still lack many subtle social cues that are important for interacting with humans. Among them are the so-called microexpressions— facial expressions that are short, subtle, and involuntary. We investigate to what extent microexpressions in digital humans influence people's perceptions and decision-making in order to inform the practices of digital human's design. Our two experiments applied four types of microexpressions based on emotion type (happiness and anger) and intensity (normal and extreme). This paper is among the first to design and evaluate microexpressions with different intensity levels in digital humans. In particular, we leverage the possibilities of digitally (re)designing humans and human perception. These possibilities are feasible only in a digital environment, where it is possible to explore various microexpressions beyond real human beings' physical capabilities.

Topics & Concepts

PerceptionAffect (linguistics)DisgustHappinessPsychologyLeverage (statistics)Cognitive psychologySocial psychologyTrustworthinessSincerityHuman–computer interactionComputer scienceAngerCommunicationArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceInnovative Human-Technology InteractionSocial Robot Interaction and HRIVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts
Microexpressions in digital humans: perceived affect, sincerity, and trustworthiness | Litcius