Learning with Virtual PeersJustine Cassell, Northwestern UniversityFriday, March 3, 2006
Cassell analyzes the interactions between children and virtual peers on a micro level, studying slices of behavior such as gesture, posture, and intonation, and how they lead to learning. To incorporate context and body movement – both key to young children's storytelling – the study uses play objects such as castles that become part of the narrative setting. While most research on pedagogical agents focuses on the look and feel of the on-screen character, which tends to result in stereotyped depictions, Cassell focuses on verbal and non-verbal cues that influence children's perception of virtual peers. She has struggled to create virtual peers that look ambiguous – i.e., that can be perceived as either male or female; Caucasian, Latina/o, or African-American. In one study she presented a picture of a virtual peer that children did not think was African-American. However, when the same virtual peer told a story using syntactical features of African-American Vernacular English, children thought the character was African-American. Professor Cassell ended her talk by sharing a fascinating glimpse of
her latest research, on how students with Asberger's syndrome can
learn social skills from interacting and playing with virtual peers. |
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