Affective computing
Lessons from a failure: generating tailored smoking cessation letters
Artificial Intelligence
Designing Persuasive Dialogue Systems: Using Argumentation with Care
PERSUASIVE '08 Proceedings of the 3rd international conference on Persuasive Technology
Layered evaluation of interactive adaptive systems: framework and formative methods
User Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction
PERSUASIVE'10 Proceedings of the 5th international conference on Persuasive Technology
Personalizing triggers for charity actions
PERSUASIVE'13 Proceedings of the 8th international conference on Persuasive Technology
Hi-index | 0.00 |
The idea that a computer system could be used to motivate people to perform a certain task on the basis of a user model is certainly not novel. As early as the 80s, intelligent tutoring systems would encourage students to learn by means of tailored feedback and hints [24], and in the 90s patient education systems would attempt to address the problem of compliance to a medical regimen by means of information and personalised advice [1] or would encourage people to adopt healthier lifestyles [19]. It is however only recently that a number of, seemingly non correlated, extensive research efforts, from various perspectives, have started to focus on a more complex cognitive model of rational and extra-rational features, involving emotions, persuasion, motivation and argumentation. We can distinguish three parallel strands of research that have become prominent.