Abstract

This paper presents the theoretical and practical fundamentals of using physiology sensors to capture human emotion reactivity in a products or systems engineering context. We aim to underline the complexity of regulating (internal and external) effects on the human body and highly individual physiological (emotion) responses and provide a starting point for engineering researchers entering the field. Although great advances have been made in scenarios involving human-machine interactions, the critical elements—the actions and responses of the human—remain far beyond automatic control, because of the irrational behavior of human subjects. These (re)actions, which cannot be satisfactorily modeled, stem mostly from the fact that human behavior is regulated by emotions. The physiological measurement of the latter can thus be a potential door to future advances for the community. In this paper, following a brief overview of the foundations and ongoing discussions in psychology and neuroscience, various emotion-related physiological responses are explained on the basis of a systematic review of the autonomic nervous system and its regulation of the human body. Based on sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system responses, various sensor measurements that are relevant in an engineering context, such as electrocardiography, electroencephalography, electromyography, pulse oximetry, blood pressure measurements, respiratory transducer, body temperature measurements, galvanic skin response measurements, and others, are explained. After providing an overview of ongoing engineering and human-computer interaction projects, we discuss engineering-specific challenges and experiment setups in terms of their usability and appropriateness for data analysis. We identify current limitations associated with the use of physiology sensors and discuss developments in this area, such as software-based facial affect coding and near-infrared spectroscopy. The key to truly understanding user experience and designing systems and products that integrate emotional states dynamically lies in understanding and measuring physiology. This paper serves as a call for the advancement of affective engineering research.

Highlights

  • N Keywords Affective engineering · Emotion reactivity · Emotion coding through arousal and valence · Sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems · Physiological measurement sensors

  • We identify current limitations associated with the use of physiology sensors and discuss developments in this area, such as software-based facial affect coding and near-infrared spectroscopy

  • Considerable progress has been made in measuring and interpreting physiological responses, especially in psychology, neuroscience, and cognitive science (“Emotion and its expression in the form of physiological changes” section), as well as in human factors engineering (HFE) and ergonomics and human–computer interaction (HCI) (“Physiology sensor use in engineering and engineering design science experiments and its challenges” section)

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Summary

Emotion and its expression in the form of physiological changes

Psychology has provided the fundamental knowledge and framework of emotions and primarily tells us about the existence and great importance of emotions as part of being human. For a decent overview of relevant experiments conducted in psychology, the measurement tools used, and the reasoning for either approach, we suggest reading the reviews of the measurement of emotion by Levenson (2014) and Mauss and Robinson (2009) In his Emotion Specificity Hypothesis, Levenson (2003) presents unique and distinct profiles of physiological responses based on changes in the autonomic nervous system (ANS). The common and critical foundation lies in acknowledging and understanding the complexity of how the autonomic nervous system functions (“The autonomic nervous system and its regulation of the body” section) This fundamental knowledge allows us to engage in interpreting physiological responses in terms of emotions and related behaviors. We provide an overview of the ANS and the related measurement sensors and techniques

The autonomic nervous system and its regulation of the body
Respiratory system and its measurement tools
Muscle tension and its measurement tools
Pupillary response and its measurement tools
Brain activity and its measurement tools
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