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proposition 1: agents need content proposition 2: agents must provide added value proposition 3: gestures and (facial) animation must be meaningful proposition 4: agents should be naturally embedded in their environment proposition 5: the behavior of agents must be understandable propositions
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remark 1: the aesthetics of agents should be centered around function, that is form and content remark 2: developing agents requires intelligent multimedia technology remarks
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requirements -- guidelines for system design applications -- target demonstrators technology -- declarative programming evaluation-- validation, PEFiC conclusions and future research -- digital dossiers structure
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declarative language -- for agent support multiple threads of control -- for multiple shared objects distributed communication -- networking capabilities (TCP/IP) programming platform Requirements -- guidelines for system design convenience -- for non-professional authors compositional semantics -- combining operations re-definability -- for high-level specification of actions parametrization -- for the adaptation of actions interaction -- with a (virtual) environment scripting behavior
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Applications -- target demonstrators Agents in multi-user virtual environments Mixed-media presentations with commentators Tai-Chi, domestic servants and conducting music tai-chi demonstrator grasping and reaching, using inverse kinematics and reasoning facial animation (with text-to-speech) virtual presenter -- presenting powerpoint presentation STEP applications
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Technology -- declarative programming DLP+X3D control points: get/set -- position, rotation, viewpoint event-handling -- asynchronous accept STEP move -- move(Agent,BodyPart,Direction,Duration) turn -- turn(Agent,BodyPart,Direction,Duration) sequence -- [Action_1,...,Action_{n}] parallel -- parallel([Action_1,...,Action_{n}]) choice -- disjunct([Action_1,...,Action_{n}]) repeat -- repeat(Action,k) composite operators
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Evaluation -- validating agent-based applications Embodied agents as fictional characters phase 1 -- encoding ethics -- good vs. bad aesthetics -- beauty vs ugliness epistemics -- realistic vs. unrealistic phase 2 -- comparison establishing personal relevance, mutual similarity and valence towards fictional character phase 3 -- response involvement vs distance -- tendency to approach or avoid PEFiC
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Conclusions In this paper... navigation -- pure interactivity guided tours -- using some narrative structure agent-mediated -- navigation and guided tours validation scenario(s) Future research directions
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