Publication | Open Access
ThermalWear: Exploring Wearable On-chest Thermal Displays to Augment Voice Messages with Affect
51
Citations
63
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Voice InteractionWearable SystemEngineeringAffective DesignAmbient DisplayWearable TechnologyWearable ComputerCommunicationAugment Voice MessagesVoice MessagesSocial SciencesVirtual RealityAffective ComputingAffect PerceptionDesignUser ExperienceVoice TechnologySpeech CommunicationVoice AssistantsTechnologyVoiceThermal ComfortHuman-computer InteractionSpeech ProcessingEmotional Prosody ProductionSpeech PerceptionEmotionEmotion RecognitionNonverbal Communication
Voice is a rich modality for conveying emotions, however emotional prosody production can be situationally or medically impaired. Since thermal displays have been shown to evoke emotions, we explore how thermal stimulation can augment perception of neutrally-spoken voice messages with affect. We designed ThermalWear, a wearable on-chest thermal display, then tested in a controlled study (N=12) the effects of fabric, thermal intensity, and direction of change. Thereafter, we synthesized 12 neutrally-spoken voice messages, validated (N=7) them, then tested (N=12) if thermal stimuli can augment their perception with affect. We found warm and cool stimuli (a) can be perceived on the chest, and quickly without fabric (4.7-5s) (b) do not incur discomfort (c) generally increase arousal of voice messages and (d) increase / decrease message valence, respectively. We discuss how thermal displays can augment voice perception, which can enhance voice assistants and support individuals with emotional prosody impairments.
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