Teaching Skills with Virtual Humans : Lessons from the Development of the Thinking Head Whiteboard
Teaching Skills with Virtual Humans : Lessons from the Development of the Thinking Head Whiteboard
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Author(s): Bond, Marissa
Powers, David
Raghavendra, Parimala
ISBN No.: 9789811623110
Pages: xi, 116
Year: 202106
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 228.41
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Marissa Bond completed her PhD at Flinders University, where she focused on using virtual humans to help children with autism develop their social skills, an undertaking that combined her fascination with virtual humans and artificial intelligence with her love of teaching and education. She now looks after both the education and software development teams at Lumination, an Adelaide-based EduTech company. Marissa holds qualifications in primary school teaching and computer science, and has industry experience as a software developer, educator and science communicator. David Powers is a Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science at Flinders University. He holds a PhD in Computational Psycholinguistics and cofounded SIGNLL and CoNLL, the Special Interest Group and Conference in Computational Natural Language Learning, and aspects of his research have since been commercialized through several startups. His current research in Computational Cognitive Science focuses on Assistive Technology for people with disabilities, focusing particularly on issues relating to language and learning, as well as Artificial Intelligence and Human Computer Interface technologies involving Natural Language, Machine Learning, Neural Networks and/or Brain Computer Interface. Parimala Raghavendra is an Associate Professor of Disability and Community Inclusion at Flinders University. She has extensive clinical, research and teaching experience in the area of augmentative and alternative communication for children and adults with developmental disability, gained through her studies and work in India, Singapore, the USA, Sweden and Australia.


Her current research focuses on investigating the impact of learning to use social media on the social networks and wellbeing of young people and adults with disabilities, and on using mobile technologies to enhance the participation of people with disabilities.


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