Abstract—Many researchers have worked on the
measurement of emotion from the perspectives of their various
domains, but there is little research on emotion in interaction in
the architecture domain. To develop measures of emotion in
interaction associated with spaces, this paper reviews
representative studies and techniques adopted for the
measurement of emotion in Human-Computer Interaction.
Emotional states and emotional response are two important
factors to be considered in measuring emotion. In general,
emotional states are divided into discrete and dimensional
emotion models, whereas emotional responses are organized in
terms of experiential, physiological, and behavior response. A
critical review would enable the consolidation of knowledge to
develop appropriate measures for emotion in interaction design.
Through an exhaustive search on contents pages of articles,
systematic methods for measuring emotional states and
responses were examined, and several problems specific to the
measurement of each emotion component were investigated.
Index Terms—Emotion, measurements, multi-componential
response, experiential response, physiological response,
behavior response.
The authors are with the Department of Housing and Interior Design,
Kyung Hee University, Seoul 130-701, Republic of Korea (e-mail:
mijeongkim@khu.ac.kr, mecho@khu.ac.kr, jtkim@khu.ac.kr).
[PDF]
Cite: M. J. Kim, M. E. Cho, and J. T. Kim, "Measures of Emotion in Interaction for Health Smart
Home," International Journal of Engineering and Technology vol. 7, no. 4, pp. 343-348, 2015.