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Article type: Cover
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Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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Article type: Index
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Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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Takao MONMA, Eiji SAWAMURA, Noriyoshi URATANI, Katsuhiko SHIRAI
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-107/ME2002-1
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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For the expansion of closed-caption on TV programs for hearing-impaired people, it is important to support for the creating for a manuscript. In this paper, we reported on the closed-caption manuscript production system with the speech and character recognition. This system will create a complete manuscript from a incomplete paper script and speech audio data of TV programs.
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Sakae Tsukino, Katsutoshi Mizumachi, Hiroshi Nakayama
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-108/ME2002-2
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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Asahi Broadcasting Corporation has virtual system since last year and have produced several programs. In this paper, we report a summary of the system and how to create CG sets. Using Virtual set, we can get free stage effects and expressions.
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Mamiko SAKATA, Mariko SHIBA, Makoto TADENUMA
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-109/ME2002-3
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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This paper reports how viewers felt and recognized KANSEI information from body expression by two approaches; those are analyses estimations of impression and eye movements of viewers. In the regression analyses using KANSEI information scores and the physical movement factors as the destination and explanation variables, respectively, significant regression equations were obtained for all. It is concluded that KANSEI information are actually expressed and impressed, i.e., communicated through human body as a media. In the latter analyses, it was revealed that viewers tended to fix their eyes on the space between body parts. Consequently, it is proposed that both bottom-up and top-down processing are related to the recognition of KANSEI information from body expression.
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Haruki KAWAKUBO, Kazunobu AZUMA, Makoto KOSUGI
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-110/ME2002-4
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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Human models are indispensable to scenery. However, their motions made by existing methods are specified with the program in advance generally, and also lacks in the flexibility of a result. Then, we generate autonomous human model behavior based on psychology. Human selects the behavior by mental conflicts depending on the personality. Moreover, the degree of intimacy was expressed by evaluating a relative attractiveness value. Thus, physiological need and social need of each human model were generated autonomously, and student behavior at a campus was simulated.
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Junji YOSHIDA, Hiroshi HASEGAWA, Masao KASUGA
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-111/ME2002-5
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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In this paper we investigated effects of the presentation time interval on a subjective evaluation test of loudness. We carried out paired comparison experiments of pure tones loudness with changing the time interval of the comparison. As the results, two characteristic effects were obtained. The difference limen of the loudness was almost proportional to the time interval in below 10 s and was almost the same value of 1.5 dB in above 10 s. On the other hand, the effect of the presentation order was smallest at the time interval of about 5 s.
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Hiroyuki KOBAYASHI, Masakazu Suzuki, Naokazu AOKI
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-112/ME2002-6
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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It is generally accepted that our preferred flesh-color is based on our memory-color. In the present paper, the memory-color of flesh-color was investigated by asking testees to color images like solid color, illustration picture and photographic image of a woman and a man, shown on a CRT display, with their memorized flesh-color for each image. The results suggested that woman's skin is imagined as the flesh-color, but the painted colors were considerably brighter than the actual woman's skin color, and that memory-color is not one decided color, but there is one for each image, and it depends on age and sex.
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Takahiro NAKAI, Makoto TADENUMA
Article type: Article
Session ID: AIT2002-113/ME2002-7
Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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Some physical quantities for textures in paintings that have drawn by masters has been investigated. It is shown that there is some relationship between impressions and those physical quantities.
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Article type: Appendix
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Published: May 24, 2002
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Article type: Appendix
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Published: May 24, 2002
Released on J-STAGE: June 23, 2017
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