Review published In:
Pragmatics & Cognition
Vol. 7:1 (1999) ► pp.226239
References
Bates, J.
1994 “The role of emotion in believable agents”. Communications of the ACM 37(7): 122–125.Google Scholar
Beck-Busse, G.
1996 “ ‘Rome tremble, & les Cardinaux, & tous les Evesques’: à propos de Sabbataï Zevi (1616–1676), faux Messie de Smyrne”. In W. Busse and M. -C. Varol-Bornes (eds), Hommage à Haïm Vidal Sephiha. Bern: Peter Lang, 445–464.Google Scholar
Brown, M. A. and Carmo, J.
(eds) 1996Deontic Logic, Agency and Normative Systems. Berlin: Springer-Verlag.Google Scholar
Card, O. S.
1986Speaker for the Dead. New York: Tom Doherty Associates.Google Scholar
Carpenter, S. and Halberstadt, A. G.
1996 “What makes people angry? Laypersons’ and psychologists’ categorisations of anger in the family”. Cognition & Emotion 10(6): 627ff.Google Scholar
Castelfranchi, C.
1998 “Modelling social action for AI agents”. Artificial Intelli-gence 103(1/2): 157–182.Google Scholar
Castelfranchi, C. and Poggi, I.
1988 “Vergogna”. In C. Castelfranchi, Che figura. Emozioni e immagine sociale. (Universale Paperbacks, 2201). Bologna: Il Mulino, 161–207.Google Scholar
Chwelos, G.
1994 “Appraisal, computational models, and Scherer’s expert system”. Cognition & Emotion 8(3): 245–258.Google Scholar
Conte, R. and Castelfranchi, C.
1995a “Understanding the functions of norms in social groups through simulation”. In G. N. Gilbert and R. Conte, R. (eds), Artificial Societies: The Computer Simulation of Social Life. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
1995bCognitive and Social Action. London: UCL Press.Google Scholar
Damasio, A. R.
1994Descartes’ Error: Emotion, Reason, and the Human Brain. New York: Gosset/Putnam Press.Google Scholar
Devoto, G. and Oli, G. C.
1967Vocabolario illustrato della lingua italiana. 21 vols. Milan: Selezione dal Reader’s Digest.Google Scholar
Elliott, C.
1994 “Components of two-way emotion communication between humans and computers using a broad, rudimentary model of affect and personality”. Cognitive Studies: Bulletin of the Japanese Cognitive Science Society 1(2): 16–30.Google Scholar
1997 “I picked up catapia and other stories: a multimodal approach to expressivity for ‘emotionally intelligent’ agents”. In Proceedings of the First International Conference on Autonomous Agents. Marina del Rey, CA, February 1997, pp. 451–457.Google Scholar
Ferber, R.
1991 “Slip of the tongue, or slip of the ear? On the perception and transcription of naturalistic slips of the tongue”. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 20(2): 105–122.Google Scholar
1995 “Reliability and validity of slip-of-the-tongue corpora: a methodological note”. Linguistics 33(6): 1169 ff.Google Scholar
Fromkin, V. A.
(ed) 1973Speech Errors as Linguistic Evidence. The Hague: Mouton.Google Scholar
Gardner, H.
1983Frames of Mind. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Goleman, D.
1995Emotional Intelligence. New York: Bantam Books.Google Scholar
Halberstadt, J. B., Niedenthal, P. M. and Kushner, J.
1995 “Resolution of lexical ambiguity by emotional state”. Psychological Science 6(5): 278–282.Google Scholar
Haspelmath, M.
1991Review of V.S. Xrakovskij (ed), Tipologija iterativnyx konstrukci] (“Typology of Iterative Constructions”), Leningrad: Nauka 1989 Studies in Language 151: 494–499.Google Scholar
Hazon, M.
1981Grande dizionario inglese-italiano, italiano-inglese. Milan: Garzanti (1st edn.: 1961).Google Scholar
Hofstadter, D. R.
1985Metamagical Themas: Questing for the Essence of Mind and Pattern. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Hofstadter, D. and Dennett, D. C.
(eds) 1981The Mind’s I: Fantasies and Reflections on Self and Soul. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Hofstadter, D. R.
and The Fluid Analogies Research Group 1995Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies. Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought. New York: Basic Books.Google Scholar
Hudlicka, E. and Fellous, J. -M.
(April) 1996 “Review of computational models of emotion”. Technical Report 9612. Arlington, MA: Psychometrix.Google Scholar
Li, T.
1993 “Narratives of history in the cinematography of Hou Xiaoxian” (trans. E. Karchmer and F. -Y. Ming). In: T. E. Barlow (ed), The Nationalisms Question. Special issue. Durham, NC: Positions: East Asia Cultures Critique 1(3): 805–815.Google Scholar
Matthews, G. and Harley, T. A.
1996 “Connectionist models of emotional distress and attentional bias”. Cognition & Emotion 10(6): 561–600.Google Scholar
Moravcsik, E. A.
1978 “Reduplicative constructions”. In J. H. Greenberg, C. A. Ferguson and E. A. Moravcsik (eds), Universals in Human Language, Vol.~3: Word Structure. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 297–334.Google Scholar
Nissan, E.
1996 “From ALIBI to COLUMBUS: the long march to self-aware computational models of humor”. In J. Hulstijn and A. Nijholt (ed), Automatic Interpretation and Generation of Verbal Humor. (Proceedings of the 12th Twente Workshop on Language Technology [TWLT~12], joint with International Work-shop on Computational Humor [IWCH’96]). University of Twente, Enschede, The Netherlands, September 1996, 69–85.Google Scholar
1998a “Emotion, culture, communication”. Pragmatics & Cognition 5(2): 359–373.Google Scholar
1998b “Word formation (in language and computation)”. In A. Kent and J. G. Williams (eds), Encyclopedia of Computer Science and Technology and in A. Kent (ed), Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science. New York: Marcel Dekker.Google Scholar
1998c “Advances in deontic logic". [Review of Brown and Carmo (1996) + bibliography]. Computers and Artificial Intelligence.Google Scholar
Nowakowska, M.
1984 “Theories of dialogues”. Ch. 7 in her Theories of Research (21 vols). Seaside, CA: Intersystems Publications, Vol. 21, pp. 305–362.Google Scholar
Orbaum, S.
1998 “Born with a spolden goon” [sic]. The Jerusalem Post. Internet edn., March 17.Google Scholar
Ortony, A., Clore, G. L. and Collins, A.
1988The Cognitive Structure of Emotions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pfeifer, R.
1988 “Artificial intelligence models of emotion”. In V. Hamilton, G. H. Bower and N. H. Frijda (eds), Cognitive Perspectives on Emotion and Motivation. Dordrecht: Kluwer, 287–320.Google Scholar
Reeves, B. and Nass, C.
1996The Media Equation. Stanford: Center for the Study of Language and Information.Google Scholar
Roseman, I. J., Antoniou, A. A. and Jose, P. E.
1996 “Appraisal determinants of emotions: constructing a more accurate and comprehensive theory”. Cognition and Emotion 10(3): 241–277.Google Scholar
Scherer, K. R.
1982 “Emotion as a process: function, origin, and regulation”. Social Science Information 211: 555–570.Google Scholar
Segerberg, K.
1989 “Bringing it about”. Journal of Philosophical Logic 18(4): 327–348.Google Scholar
Skoda, F.
1983Le redoublement expressif: un universal linguistique. Analyse du procédé en grec ancien et en ďautres langues. Leuven: Peeters 1983.Google Scholar
Salovey, P. and Mayer, J. D.
1990 “Emotional Intelligence”. Imagination, Cognition and Personality 9(3): 185–211.Google Scholar
Wehrle, T. and Scherer, K. R.
1995 “Potential pitfalls in computational modelling of appraisal processes: a reply to Chwelos and Oatley”. Cognition & Emotion 9(6): 599–636.Google Scholar
Cited by

Cited by 4 other publications

Li, Guoyan, Junjie Hou, Yi Liu & Jianguo Wei
2024. MVIB-DVA: Learning minimum sufficient multi-feature speech emotion embeddings under dual-view aware. Expert Systems with Applications 246  pp. 123110 ff. DOI logo
Nissan, Ephraim
Nissan, Ephraim
2009. Computational models of the emotions: from models of the emotions of the individual to modelling the emerging irrational behaviour of crowds. AI & SOCIETY 24:4  pp. 403 ff. DOI logo
Przegalinska, Aleksandra
2019. Introduction. In Wearable Technologies in Organizations,  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 april 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.