Examining the Effects of Human-Likeness of Avatars on Emotion Perception and Emotion Elicitation
Shiyao Zhang, Omar Faruk, Robert Porzel, Dennis K\"uster, Tanja Schultz, Hui Liu

TL;DR
This study investigates how the human-likeness of avatars influences emotion perception and elicitation, revealing that moderate human-likeness and cuteness can positively affect emotional responses in virtual interactions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the impact of avatar human-likeness and cuteness on emotion perception, highlighting implications for avatar design in various applications.
Findings
High human-likeness avatars elicit more negative emotions.
Moderately human-like avatars and cute avatars positively influence emotion perception.
Cuteness and natural facial features significantly affect emotion elicitation.
Abstract
An increasing number of online interaction settings now provide the possibility to visually represent oneself via an animated avatar instead of a video stream. Benefits include protecting the communicator's privacy while still providing a means to express their individuality. In consequence, there has been a surge in means for avatar-based personalization, ranging from classic human representations to animals, food items, and more. However, using avatars also has drawbacks. Depending on the human-likeness of the avatar and the corresponding disparities between the avatar and the original expresser, avatars may elicit discomfort or even hinder effective nonverbal communication by distorting emotion perception. This study examines the relationship between the human-likeness of virtual avatars and emotion perception for Ekman's six "basic emotions". Research reveals that avatars with…
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