Text-driven Mouth Animation for Human Computer Interaction With Personal Assistant
Author(s) -
Yliess Hati,
Francis Rousseaux,
Clément Duhart
Publication year - 2019
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.21785/icad2019.032
Subject(s) - animation , computer science , patience , human–computer interaction , perception , realism , natural (archaeology) , architecture , multimedia , computer animation , interface (matter) , visualization , artificial intelligence , computer graphics (images) , psychology , visual arts , social psychology , art , archaeology , bubble , neuroscience , maximum bubble pressure method , parallel computing , history
Personal assistants are becoming more pervasive in our environments but still do not provide natural interactions. Their lack of realism in term of expressiveness and their lack of visual feedback can create frustrating experiences and make users lose patience. In this sense, we propose an end-to-end trainable neural architecture for text-driven 3D mouth animations. Previous works showed such architectures provide better realism and could open the door for integrated affective Human Computer Interface (HCI). Our study shows that such visual feedback improves users' comfort for 78% of the candidates significantly while slightly improving their time perception.
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