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Publications (2 of 2) Show all publications
Zojaji, S., Schiött, J., Ivegren, W., Matviienko, A. & Peters, C. (2025). Influence of Floor Type on Social Navigation with Small Free-Standing Groups in Virtual Reality. In: Virtual, Augmented and Mixed Reality - 17th International Conference, VAMR 2025, Held as Part of the 27th HCI International Conference, HCII 2025, Proceedings: . Paper presented at 17th International Conference on Virtual, Augmented and Mixed Reality, VAMR 2025, held as part of the 27th HCI International Conference, HCII 2025, Gothenburg, Sweden, Jun 22 2025 - Jun 27 2025 (pp. 280-298). Springer Nature
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Influence of Floor Type on Social Navigation with Small Free-Standing Groups in Virtual Reality
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2025 (English)In: Virtual, Augmented and Mixed Reality - 17th International Conference, VAMR 2025, Held as Part of the 27th HCI International Conference, HCII 2025, Proceedings, Springer Nature , 2025, p. 280-298Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

Human footsteps play a significant role in everyday life, allowing individuals to discern the emotions, gender, and intentions of others solely from the sound of their footsteps. However, the influence of footstep sounds made when walking on different floor types in virtual reality (VR) environments when joining conversational groups remains unclear. In this paper, we present a controlled study (N=50) to assess the impact of five different floor types, associated with specific footstep sounds and visuals, on the persuasiveness of Embodied Conversational Agents (ECAs) when inviting participants to join a free-standing conversational group. We analyze routes taken by participants and the positions at which they join the group, which may be compliant or not with the agent’s request when approaching the group while walking on different virtual floor types. Our findings reveal that the type of floor being walked upon, defined by footstep sounds and visual appearance, significantly impacts the persuasiveness of ECAs and the trajectories taken by participants to join the group. Participants took longer paths and joined the group in the presence of more pleasant footstep sounds. Further, they tended to adhere to social norms by avoiding walking through the group’s center.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Springer Nature, 2025
Keywords
floor type, joining behavior, small free-standing groups, sound, virtual reality
National Category
Human Computer Interaction Computer Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-368519 (URN)10.1007/978-3-031-93712-5_17 (DOI)001544399900015 ()2-s2.0-105008003094 (Scopus ID)
Conference
17th International Conference on Virtual, Augmented and Mixed Reality, VAMR 2025, held as part of the 27th HCI International Conference, HCII 2025, Gothenburg, Sweden, Jun 22 2025 - Jun 27 2025
Note

Part of ISBN 9783031937118

QC 20250818

Available from: 2025-08-18 Created: 2025-08-18 Last updated: 2025-12-08Bibliographically approved
Schiött, J., Ivegren, W., Borg, A., Parodis, I. & Skantze, G. (2025). Using LLMs to Grade Clinical Reasoning for Medical Students in Virtual Patient Dialogues. In: Frédéric Béchet, Fabrice Lefèvre, Nicholas Asher, Seokhwan Kim, Teva Merlin (Ed.), Proceedings of the 26th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue: . Paper presented at The 26th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue, Avignon, France, Aug 25-27, 2025 (pp. 750-763). SIGDIAL
Open this publication in new window or tab >>Using LLMs to Grade Clinical Reasoning for Medical Students in Virtual Patient Dialogues
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2025 (English)In: Proceedings of the 26th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue / [ed] Frédéric Béchet, Fabrice Lefèvre, Nicholas Asher, Seokhwan Kim, Teva Merlin, SIGDIAL , 2025, p. 750-763Conference paper, Published paper (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

This paper presents an evaluation of the use of large language models (LLMs) for grading clinical reasoning during rheumatology medical history virtual patient (VP) simulations. The study explores the feasibility of using state-of-the-art LLMs, including both general-purpose models, with various prompting strategies such as zero-shot, analysis-first, and chain-of-thought prompting, as well as reasoning models. The performance of these models in grading transcribed dialogues from VP simulations conducted on a Furhat robot was evaluated against human expert annotations. Human experts initially achieved a 65% inter-rater agreement, which resulted in a pooled Cohen’s Kappa of 0.71 and 82.3% correctness. The best LLM, o3-mini, achieved a pooled Kappa of 0.68 and 81.5% correctness, with response times under 30 seconds, compared to approximately 6 minutes for human grading. These results indicate the possibility that automatic assessments can approach human reliability under controlled simulation conditions while delivering time and cost efficiencies.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
SIGDIAL, 2025
National Category
Computer and Information Sciences
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-374882 (URN)
Conference
The 26th Annual Meeting of the Special Interest Group on Discourse and Dialogue, Avignon, France, Aug 25-27, 2025
Note

Part of ISBN 979-8-89176-329-6

QC 20260107

Available from: 2026-01-06 Created: 2026-01-06 Last updated: 2026-01-07Bibliographically approved
Organisations
Identifiers
ORCID iD: ORCID iD iconorcid.org/0009-0004-8417-6106

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