CHIL - Computers in the Human Interaction Loop

Type | Start | End |
---|---|---|
European | Jan 2004 | Jul 2007 |
Responsible | URL |
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Josep R. Casas | CHIL project page (CORDIS) |
Reference
Computers in the Human Interaction Loop
Ref.: UE-IST, Integrated Project (IP) IST-2003-506909
Description
The aim of CHIL was to develop and explore a fundamental shift in the way we use computers. In contrast to building machines that have to be operated directly and explicitly (by keying in commands), CHIL target was to realize computer services that are delivered to humans in an implicit, indirect and unobtrusive way. CHIL frees people to interact with people and repositions machines to hover in the background, observing the humans and –like electronic butlers– attempt to anticipate and serve their needs. This concept was named CHIL, for Computers in the Human Interaction Loop, since it aims to introduce Computers into a loop of Humans interacting with Humans, rather than condemning a human to operate in a loop of computers, forcing him/her to attend to and interact with an artefact on its artificial terms.
The following video was prepared by UPC in the context of the CHIL project to show the aim and some results from UPC contribution:
CHIL fosters new multi-modal communication paradigms, supporting in particular computer mediated Human-Human communication. CHIL services aim at providing implicit assistance requiring a minimum of human attention and disruptions, by observing the activities of users and guessing their intention. Fundamental research on specific areas such as robust speech recognition, vision analysis, data fusion, topic segmentation and summarization allowed CHIL to significantly advance the state-of-the-art in these disciplines with a direct impact on the multimodal interface community.
Innovative aspects: Provide computing services implicitly, by observing humans engaging & interacting with humans, and predicting and proactively providing services
Outcome: Reduce preoccupation with technological artifacts (techno-clutter). Improve productivity and human experience.
Scientific contributions: Full description and understanding of all human communication signals accross multiple modalities. Robustness in perceptual user interfaces, which are always on.
Publications
Shape from inconsistent silhouette. Computer vision and image understanding. 2008 ;112(2):210–224. | .
Audiovisual head orientation estimation with particle filtering in multisensor scenarios. EURASIP Journal on Advances in Signal Processing. 2008 ;2008:1–13. | .
Multi-Person Tracking Strategies Based on Voxel Analysis. In: Multimodal Technologies for Perception of Humans. Vol. 4625. Multimodal Technologies for Perception of Humans. Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer; 2008. pp. 91–103. | .
Exploiting Structural Hierarchy in Articulated Objects Towards Robust Motion Capture. In: Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects. Vol. 5098. Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects. Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer; 2008. pp. 82–91. | .
Head Orientation Estimation Using Particle Filtering in Multiview Scenarios. In: Multimodal Technologies for Perception of Humans. Vol. 4625. Multimodal Technologies for Perception of Humans. Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer; 2008. pp. 317–327. | .
The CHIL Audiovisual Corpus for Lecture and Meeting Analysis inside Smart Rooms. Language resources and evaluation. 2007 ;41(3):389–407. |
Multi-person 3D Tracking with Particle Filters on Voxels. In: 2007 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing. 2007 International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing. ; 2007. | .
Sistema de gestió de vídeo off-line per una smart-room . 2007 .![]() |
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Context Awareness triggered by Multiple Perceptual Analyzers. In: Emerging Artificial Intelligence Applications in Computer Engineering. Vol. 160. Emerging Artificial Intelligence Applications in Computer Engineering. Amsterdam: IOS Press; 2007. pp. 371–383. | .
UPC Audio, Video and Multimodal Person Tracking Systems in the CLEAR Evaluation Campaign. In: Lecture notes in computer science. Vol. 4122. Lecture notes in computer science. Berlin / Heidelberg: Springer; 2007. pp. 93–104. | .
Pages
Collaborators
Josep R. Casas | Associate Professor | josep.ramon.casas@upc.edu |
Albert Gil Moreno | Software Engineer | albert.gil@upc.edu |
Ferran Marqués | Professor | ferran.marques@upc.edu |
Josep Ramon Morros | Associate Professor | ramon.morros@upc.edu |
Montse Pardàs | Professor | montse.pardas@upc.edu |
Javier Ruiz Hidalgo | Associate Professor | j.ruiz@upc.edu |
Veronica Vilaplana | Associate Professor | veronica.vilaplana@upc.edu |
Xavier Giró | Associate Professor | xavier.giro@upc.edu |