CS547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar
CS547: Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (2010-2011, Stanford Univ.). Human-Computer Interaction Seminar (Seminar on People, Computers, and Design) is a Stanford University course that features weekly speakers on topics related to human-computer interaction design. The seminar is organized by the Stanford HCI Group, which works across disciplines to understand the intersection between humans and computers. This playlist consists of seminar speakers recorded during the 2010-2011 academic year.
Lecture 12 - Automatically Extracting Social Meaning from Speed Dates |
Dan Jurafsky discusses a system he and his colleagues created that can detect social intentions with above 70 0x1.829600p+843ccuracy. He says that this system greatly outperforms humans and describes why humans are especially poor detectors of flirtatiousness, and instead often project their own intended behavior onto their interlocutors.
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