Karola Pitsch

List of John Benjamins publications for which Karola Pitsch plays a role.

Title

Asymmetry and adaptation in social interaction: A micro-analytic perspective

Edited by Iris Nomikou, Karola Pitsch and Katharina Rohlfing

Special issue of Interaction Studies 14:2 (2013) xii, 178 pp.
Subjects Artificial Intelligence | Cognition and language | Evolution of language | Interaction Studies
Pitsch, Karola, Anna-Lisa Vollmer, Katharina Rohlfing, Jannik Fritsch and Britta Wrede 2014 Tutoring in adult-child interaction: On the loop of the tutor’s action modification and the recipient’s gazeInteraction Studies 15:1, pp. 55–98 | Article
Research of tutoring in parent-infant interaction has shown that tutors – when presenting some action – modify both their verbal and manual performance for the learner (‘motherese’, ‘motionese’). Investigating the sources and effects of the tutors’ action modifications, we suggest an interactional… read more
Nomikou, Iris, Karola Pitsch and Katharina Rohlfing 2013 Asymmetry and adaptation in social interaction: A micro-analytic perspectiveAsymmetry and adaptation in social interaction: A micro-analytic perspective, Nomikou, Iris, Karola Pitsch and Katharina Rohlfing (eds.), pp. vii–xii | Article
Pitsch, Karola, Anna-Lisa Vollmer and Manuel Mühlig 2013 Robot feedback shapes the tutor’s presentation: How a robot’s online gaze strategies lead to micro-adaptation of the human’s conductAsymmetry and adaptation in social interaction: A micro-analytic perspective, Nomikou, Iris, Karola Pitsch and Katharina Rohlfing (eds.), pp. 268–296 | Article
The paper investigates the effects of a humanoid robot’s online feedback during a tutoring situation in which a human demonstrates how to make a frog jump across a table. Motivated by micro-analytic studies of adult-child-interaction, we investigated whether tutors react to a robot’s gaze… read more
Lohse, Manja, Marc Hanheide, Karola Pitsch, Katharina Rohlfing and Gerhard Sagerer 2009 Improving HRI design by applying Systemic Interaction Analysis (SInA)Robots in the Wild: Exploring human-robot interaction in naturalistic environments, Dautenhahn, Kerstin (ed.), pp. 298–323 | Article
Social robots are designed to interact with humans. That is why they need interaction models that take social behaviors into account. These usually influence many of a robot’s abilities simultaneously. Hence, when designing robots that users will want to interact with, all components need to be… read more