“It's the computer's fault”: reasoning about computers as moral agents
CHI '95 Conference Companion on Human Factors in Computing Systems
StressCam: non-contact measurement of users' emotional states through thermal imaging
CHI '05 Extended Abstracts on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Censor chair: exploring censorship and social presence through psychophysiological sensing
Proceedings of the 13th annual ACM international conference on Multimedia
'Affective' computing and emotion recognition systems: the future of biometric surveillance?
InfoSecCD '05 Proceedings of the 2nd annual conference on Information security curriculum development
Interacting with human physiology
Computer Vision and Image Understanding
Proceedings of the SIGCHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Alternative Dispute Resolution in Virtual Organizations
Engineering Societies in the Agents World VIII
License to chill!: how to empower users to cope with stress
Proceedings of the 5th Nordic conference on Human-computer interaction: building bridges
Fundamentals of physiological computing
Interacting with Computers
Affect-aware tutors: recognising and responding to student affect
International Journal of Learning Technology
Koko: an architecture for affect-aware games
Autonomous Agents and Multi-Agent Systems
Managing user-generated content as a knowledge commons
Logic Programs, Norms and Action
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Sensing affect raises critical privacy concerns, which are examined here using ethical theory, and with a study that illuminates the connection between ethical theory and privacy. We take the perspective that affect sensing systems encode a designer's ethical and moral decisions: which emotions will be recognized, who can access recognition results, and what use is made of recognized emotions. Previous work on privacy has argued that users want feedback and control over such ethical choices. In response, we develop ethical contracts from the theory of contractualism, which grounds moral decisions on mutual agreement. Current findings indicate that users report significantly more respect for privacy in systems with an ethical contract when compared to a control.