Designing Computational Tools for Behavioral and Clinical Science

Publication date

2021-06-08

Authors

Salah, Albert AliORCID 0000-0001-6342-428XISNI 0000000091147032

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Automatic analysis of human affective and social signals brought computer science closer to social sciences and, in particular, enabled collaborations between computer scientists and behavioral scientists. In this talk, I highlight the main research areas in this burgeoning interdisciplinary area, and provide an overview of the opportunities and challenges. Drawing on examples from our recent research, such as automatic analysis of interactive play therapy sessions with children, and diagnosis of bipolar disorder from multimodal cues, as well as relying on examples from the growing literature, I explore the potential of human-AI collaboration, where AI systems do not replace, but support monitoring and human decision making in behavioral and clinical sciences.

Keywords

Taverne, Computer Networks and Communications, Human-Computer Interaction

Citation

Salah, A A 2021, Designing Computational Tools for Behavioral and Clinical Science. in EICS '21: Companion of the 2021 ACM SIGCHI Symposium on Engineering Interactive Computing Systems. Association for Computing Machinery, pp. 1-4, 13th ACM SIGCHI Symposium on Engineering Interactive Computing Systems, EICS 2021, Virtual, Online, Netherlands, 8/06/21. https://doi.org/10.1145/3459926.3464906, conference