Implicit data collection

Overview

The collection of user-related data in human–computer interaction is used to adapt the computer interface to the end user. The data collected are used to build a user model. The user model is then used to help the application to filter the information for the end user. Such systems are useful in recommender applications, military applications (implicit stress detection) and others.

Channels for collecting data

The system can record the user's explicit interaction and thus build an MPEG7 usage history log. Furthermore, the system can use other channels to gather information about the user's emotional state. The following implicit channels have been used so far to get the affective state of the end user:

  • facial activity
  • posture activity
  • hand tension and activity
  • gestural activity
  • vocal expression
  • language and choice of words
  • electrodermal activity
  • eye tracking

Emotional spaces

The detected emotional value is usually described any of the two most popular notations:

gollark: Cat5 is the cabling, bee cuboid.
gollark: Why is it impossible?
gollark: Before I got the current osmarks.net server I actually used 4000 Arduinos duct-taped together.
gollark: Just break out your laptop and open up all the panels, and keep it going up and down so nobody can stop you.
gollark: Deploying `#![forbid(unsafe_code)]`.
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