Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors
The positive effects of interest on different aspects, e.g., learning and education, economy, psychological well-being, and social relations, have been widely addressed by many psychological and physiological studies in the last two decades. While the psychological work has investigated this impact...
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my.uniten.dspace-263332023-05-29T17:09:14Z Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors Babiker A. Baashar Y. Alkahtani A.A. Faye I. Alkawsi G. 55811524800 56768090200 55646765500 35109046500 57191982354 The positive effects of interest on different aspects, e.g., learning and education, economy, psychological well-being, and social relations, have been widely addressed by many psychological and physiological studies in the last two decades. While the psychological work has investigated this impact of interest theoretically, the physiological studies have focused more on the modulatory effects. However, some studies have addressed both sides of the effects. In this work, we conduct a comprehensive review of physiological studies on interest detection, from different perspectives carried out between 2003 and 2019. A lack of connection between the psychological and physiological studies was identified. Therefore, this paper aims to integrate the unique psychological and physiological aspects and characteristics of interest to form a base for future research by considering the pros and cons of the included studies. For example, considering the two types of interest (situational and individual) the detected interest in learning, gaming, and advertisement�s physiological experiments could be referring specifically to situational interest. Hence, bridging the gap between both physiological and psychological studies is essential for improving the research on interest. Furthermore, we propose several suggestions for future work direction. � 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Final 2023-05-29T09:09:13Z 2023-05-29T09:09:13Z 2021 Review 10.3390/app11031318 2-s2.0-85100446920 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85100446920&doi=10.3390%2fapp11031318&partnerID=40&md5=d8ff5a9601b209bac5ee9b45e9df60f0 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/26333 11 3 1318 1 28 All Open Access, Gold MDPI AG Scopus |
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The positive effects of interest on different aspects, e.g., learning and education, economy, psychological well-being, and social relations, have been widely addressed by many psychological and physiological studies in the last two decades. While the psychological work has investigated this impact of interest theoretically, the physiological studies have focused more on the modulatory effects. However, some studies have addressed both sides of the effects. In this work, we conduct a comprehensive review of physiological studies on interest detection, from different perspectives carried out between 2003 and 2019. A lack of connection between the psychological and physiological studies was identified. Therefore, this paper aims to integrate the unique psychological and physiological aspects and characteristics of interest to form a base for future research by considering the pros and cons of the included studies. For example, considering the two types of interest (situational and individual) the detected interest in learning, gaming, and advertisement�s physiological experiments could be referring specifically to situational interest. Hence, bridging the gap between both physiological and psychological studies is essential for improving the research on interest. Furthermore, we propose several suggestions for future work direction. � 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. |
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55811524800 |
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55811524800 Babiker A. Baashar Y. Alkahtani A.A. Faye I. Alkawsi G. |
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Babiker A. Baashar Y. Alkahtani A.A. Faye I. Alkawsi G. |
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Babiker A. Baashar Y. Alkahtani A.A. Faye I. Alkawsi G. Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
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Babiker A. |
title |
Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
title_short |
Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
title_full |
Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
title_fullStr |
Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
title_full_unstemmed |
Towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
title_sort |
towards detection of interest using physiological sensors |
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MDPI AG |
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2023 |
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1806424288887046144 |
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13.214268 |