The 19 Unifying Questionnaire Constructs of Artificial Social Agents

An IVA Community Analysis

Conference Paper (2020)
Author(s)

S Fitrianie (TU Delft - Interactive Intelligence)

M. Bruijnes (TU Delft - Interactive Intelligence)

Deborah Richards (Macquarie University)

Andrea Bönsch (RWTH Aachen University)

Willem Paul Brinkman (TU Delft - Interactive Intelligence)

Research Group
Interactive Intelligence
Copyright
© 2020 S. Fitrianie, M. Bruijnes, Deborah Richards, Andrea Bönsch, W.P. Brinkman
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1145/3383652.3423873
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 S. Fitrianie, M. Bruijnes, Deborah Richards, Andrea Bönsch, W.P. Brinkman
Research Group
Interactive Intelligence
ISBN (electronic)
9781450375863
Reuse Rights

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Abstract

In this paper, we report on the multi-year Intelligent Virtual Agents (IVA) community effort, involving more than 80 researchers worldwide, researching the IVA community interests and practises in evaluating human interaction with an artificial social agent (ASA). The effort is driven by previous IVA workshops and plenary IVA discussions related to the methodological crisis on the evaluation of ASAs. A previous literature review showed a continuous practise of creating new questionnaires instead of reusing validated questionnaires. We address this issue by examining questionnaire measurement constructs used in empirical studies between 2013 to 2018 published in the IVA conference. We identified 189 constructs used in 89 questionnaires that are reported across 81 studies. Although these constructs have different names, they often measure the same thing. In this paper, we, therefore, present a unifying set of 19 constructs that captures more than 80% of the 189 constructs initially identified. We established this set in two steps. First, 49 researchers classified the constructs in broad theoretically based categories. Next, 23 researchers grouped the constructs in each category on their similarity. The resulting 19 groups form a unifying set of constructs, which will be the basis for the future questionnaire instrument of human-ASA interaction.

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