Seminar Series Organization: Lola Cañamero, ETIS Lab, CY Cergy Paris University, France, Chair of the AAAC Education and Early Career Committee.
The AAAC Seminar Series has the twofold objective of: (1) presenting and critically reflecting on key research (both seminal and state-of-the art) in all areas of and disciplines related to Affective Computing, and (2) introducing Affective Computing to starting researchers and researchers from other disciplines. With this double aim in mind, the series will include different types of talks, ranging in style from keynotes, to tutorials, to interviews. Seminars will be about 1 hour long (including questions from the audience), monthly in frequency (in principle with a break the Summer term), and schedule at a time that should make it possible for most people around the globe to attend (by default at 16:00 CET/CEST).
The link to attend the seminars will be posted on the AAAC mailing list and added to this page shortly before each talk, on the day of the talk.
Seminar Series Organization: Lola Cañamero, ETIS Lab, CY Cergy Paris University, France, Chair of the AAAC Education and Early Career Committee.
| Date & LINK | Talk |
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Thursday, February 5th, 2026, 4pm CET
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Speaker: Ginevra Castellano Full Professor in Intelligent Interactive Systems, Department of Information Technology, Uppsala University, Sweden Title: From Human-Like to Human-Centric Robots: What Type of Alignment to Humans Do We Need? Abstract: Today we are witnessing an increased robotisation in all areas of society, from manufacturing to assistive technology, from healthcare to education. These application areas require robots to be able to interact with humans in an efficient and socially acceptable manner. At the same time, like all technologies, robots may not only bring benefits, but also change how we think and behave. This calls for human-robot interaction researchers to design and develop more human-centric and trustworthy artificial intelligence and robotics, which put humans at the center and preserve human agency and autonomy. In this talk I will present examples of creating trustworthy human-robot interaction in education, healthcare and transportation systems from my research at the Uppsala Social Robotics Lab, investigating dimensions of human agency, autonomy, trust, transparency, and fairness, in the quest for more human-centric robots for the societal good. Bio: Ginevra Castellano is a Full Professor in Intelligent Interactive Systems at the Department of Information Technology of Uppsala University, Sweden, where she is the Founder and Director of the Uppsala Social Robotics Lab. Her research is in the area of social robotics and human-robot interaction, addressing questions on how we can build human-robot interactions that are ethical and trustworthy, including robot ethics, robot autonomy and human oversight, gender fairness, robot transparency and trust, human-robot relationship formation, both from the perspective of developing computational skills for robotic systems, and their evaluation with human users to study acceptance and social consequences. She has been the Principal Investigator of several national and EU-funded projects on ethical and trustworthy human-robot interaction, in application areas spanning education, healthcare, and transportation systems. She is currently the coordinator of the CHANSE-NORFACE MICRO (Measuring children’s wellbeing and mental health with social robots) project (2025-2028), and the WASP-HS Research Group on Child Development in the Age of AI and Social Robots (2025-2030, funded by WASP-HS Wallenberg AI, Autonomous Systems and Software Program – Humanity and Society. Castellano was an invited speaker at the UN AI for Good Global Summit 2024 and a keynote speaker the World Summit AI 2024. She was recently awarded the Thuréus prize 2025 from the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala. |
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Friday, December 5th, 2025, 5pm CET
CLICK HERE TO WATCH THE RECORDING
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Speaker: Jonathan Gratch Research Full Professor of Computer Science and Psychology at the University of Southern California (USC), USA
Abstract: Despite consensus among emotion researchers that the social meaning of emotional expressions is contextual, other-directed, co-constructed and culturally dependent, computational methods largely rest on the assumption that expressions denote some internal state (e.g., emotion or pain) which can be recovered by an expression’s morphology or timing alone. For example, many papers at the FG conference adopt a classic detection perspective, in which observers annotate the presumed internal states revealed by an expression, then algorithms are trained to predict this mapping without access to the original context in which the expression was produced. This assumption is also implicit in government regulations, such as the EU’s AI Act which bans emotion recognition across many practical. Though social psychology theirs point to a broader perspective on expressions, they fail to offer detailed of what constitutes “context” or “co-construction” to a level that can be exploited by computational methods. In this talk, I will highlight the use of automatic expression analysis in social domains, highlighting the interpersonal processes that shape their production and analysis. I hope this talk can encourage future work that formalizes the computational implications of this social perspective, including clarifying the communicative function of expressions, how are they shaped and co-constructed via context and culture, and how socially interactive agents might adapt and engage in meaning creation? Bio: Jonathan Gratch is a Research Full Professor of Computer Science and Psychology at the University of Southern California (USC) and Director for Virtual Human Research at USC’s Institute for Creative Technologies. He completed his Ph.D. in Computer Science at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign in 1995. Dr. Gratch’s research focuses on computational models of human cognitive and social processes, especially emotion, and explores these models’ potential to advance psychological theory and shape human-machine interaction. He is the founding Editor-in-Chief (retired) of IEEE’s Transactions on Affective Computing, Associate Editor for Affective Science, Emotion Review, and former President of the Association for the Advancement of Affective Computing (AAAC). He is a Fellow of AAAI, AAAC, and the Cognitive Science Society. |
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Thursday, November 6th, 2025, 4pm CET
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Speaker: Jeffrey L. Krichmar Full Professor, Department of Cognitive Sciences and the Department of Computer Science, University of California, Irvine, USA
Abstract: Neurorobots are robots whose control systems follow structural and dynamical aspects of the nervous system. Their artificial brains can be thoroughly probed and recorded as the robot interacts with the world. Neurorobotic design principles fall into three categories that follow natural organisms: First, they must react decisively to sensory events. Second, they must have the ability to adapt, learn and remember over their lifetime. Third, they must weigh the different and sometimes conflicting options that are crucial for completing tasks. Following these principles can not only increase our understanding of how brain responses lead to flexible behavior, but they may also lead to more intelligent systems. In this talk, I will describe the field of neurorobotics and then present neurorobot interaction case studies that focus on how neuromodulation and neurohormones can influence affect, learning, and behavior. Bio: Jeffrey L. Krichmar received a B.S. in Computer Science in 1983 from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, a M.S. in Computer Science from The George Washington University in 1991, and a Ph.D. in Computational Sciences and Informatics from George Mason University in 1997. He spent 15 years as a software engineer on projects ranging from the PATRIOT Missile System at the Raytheon Corporation to Air Traffic Control for the Federal Systems Division of IBM. From 1999 to 2007, he was a Senior Fellow in Theoretical Neurobiology at The Neurosciences Institute. Since 2008, he has been a Professor in the Department of Cognitive Sciences and the Department of Computer Science at the University of California, Irvine. Krichmar has over 20 years of experience designing adaptive algorithms, creating neurobiologically plausible neural networks, and constructing brain-based robots whose behavior is guided by neurobiologically inspired models. He has over 150 publications and holds 9 patents. His work has been funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Intelligence Advanced Research Projects Activity |
The talk by Giovanna Colombetti’s (scheduled for Wednesday, March 27) has been POSTPONED. A new date will be announced shortly.
| Date | Talk | Link |
| POSTPONED. New date TBA |
Speaker: Giovanna Colombetti, University of Exeter, UK Abstract: Recent debates on the nature of the emotions include what has been called the “situated perspective”. Its proponents criticize the general tendency, in philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience, to consider emotions only as states, or processes, of a person’s brain or body (a position also known as “individualism”), with little consideration for the role of environment. As a remedy, they suggest regarding emotions as scaffolded by the environment, both synchronically and diachronically. In my talk I will present this notion of “scaffolded emotions” in detail, explain why I think it is valuable, and suggest various ways in which it can be developed further. Bio: Giovanna Colombetti is Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Social and Political sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology of the University of Exeter (UK). At Exeter she is also member of EGENIS (The Centre for the Study of the Life Sciences), where she leads the Mind, Body, and Culture research cluster. Her interests lie at the intersection of philosophy of cognitive science (especially embodied and situated cognition), philosophy of emotion, phenomenology, and material culture studies. She is the author of several articles and chapters in these areas, and of the book The Feeling Body: Affective Science Meets the Enactive Mind (published by MIT Press in 2014). Since then, she has worked to develop the notion of “situated affectivity”, and is currently writing a second monograph on our affective relation to material objects. She is currently also Editor in Chief of the interdisciplinary journal Emotion Review. |
TBA |
| Friday March 1st, 2024, 16:00 CET |
Speaker: Mohamed Chetouani, Sorbonne Université, Paris, France Title: Insights from Observers: Advancing Natural Behavior Analysis and Artificial Behavior Generation Abstract: Bio: |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| Friday February 2, 2024, 16:00 CET | Speaker: Joost Broekens, Leiden University, the Netherlands Title: What Reinforcement Learning can tell us about Emotions Abstract: Emotions are tied to appraisal of personal relevance, motivation and adaptation of behavior. Many animals show signs of emotion in their behavior. Therefore, emotions must be related to mechanisms that aid survival, and emotions must be evolutionary continuous phenomena. I propose that emotions are manifestations of Temporal Difference Reinforcement Learning (TDRL) error assessment. The TD error reflects the estimated gain or loss of utility – well-being – resulting from new evidence. I propose a TDRL Theory of Emotion, and discuss recent computational findings to investigate this. Bio: Joost Broekens is associate professor and head of the Affective Computing and Human-Robot Interaction lab at the Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science (LIACS), Leiden University. He is president emeritus of the Association for the Advancement of Affective Computing (AAAC). He is co-founder of Interactive Robotics and co-founder of Daisys. His research focuses on affective computing, in particular computational modelling of emotions in reinforcement learning and computational models of cognitive appraisal and on human-robot interaction. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| Date | Talk | Link |
| Postponed | Kim A. Bard, Department of Psychology, University of Portsmouth, UK Emotion and social cognition viewed from comparative and developmental perspectives. Abstract and bio available here. |
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March 24, 2023, 16:00 CET |
Ana Tajadura-Jiménez, i_mBODY Lab, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid, Spain The Hearing Body: Sound-driven Body Transformation Experiences and Applications for Emotional and Physical Health. Abstract and Bio available here. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| February 23, 2023, 16:00 CET | Nadia Berthouze, UCL Interaction Centre (UCLIC), UK Movement, Touch and Affective Technology: Opportunities in Physical Rehabilitation. Abstract and Bio available here. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| January 27, 2023, 16:00 CET | Rosalind Picard, MIT Media Lab, USA 25 years of Affective Computing: quo vadis, AC? Abstract and bio available here. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| November 17, 2022, 16:00 CET | Catherine Pelachaud, Sorbonne University & CNRS, France Endowing Socially Interactive Agents with Socio-Emotional Behaviors. Abstract and Bio available here. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |
| October 28, 2022, 16:00 CEST | Andrew Ortony, Northwestern University, USA The Cognitive Structure of Emotions (“OCC”), 1988-2022: An Overview. Abstract and Bio available here. |
Link to Watch on YouTube |