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González Boticario, Jesús

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González Boticario
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Mostrando 1 - 10 de 16
  • Publicación
    Should Conditional Self-Driving Cars Consider the State of the Human Inside the Vehicle?
    (ACM, 2021-06-22) Puertas Ramírez, David; Serrano Mamolar, Ana; Martín Gómez, David; González Boticario, Jesús
    Autonomous vehicles with conditional automation are said to be the next step in the development of self-driving cars. The human driver still performs a critical role in them, by taking over the control of the vehicle if prompted. As the technology is still facing pending challenges, the human drivers are also required to be able to detect and react in case of Autonomous Drive System (ADS) malfunctions. Within this context, in this work we argue that to assure safety during autonomous operation the user state should be measured all the time, which is intended to support a ”fallback ready state”. From an in-depth literature review, this article identifies the human factors involved in the aforementioned ”fallback ready state” that affect the personalization of human-vehicle interaction.
  • Publicación
    BIG-AFF: Exploring low cost and low intrusive infrastructures for affective computing in secondary schools
    (ACM, 2017-07-09) González Boticario, Jesús; Santos, Olga C.; Cabestrero Alonso, Raúl; Quirós Expósito, Pilar; Salmeron Majadas, Sergio; Uría Rivas, Raúl; Arevalillo Herráez, Miguel; Ferri, Francesc J.
    Recent research has provided solid evidence that emotions strongly affect motivation and engagement, and hence play an important role in learning. In BIG-AFF project, we build on the hypothesis that ``it is possible to provide learners with a personalised support that enriches their learning process and experience by using low intrusive (and low cost) devices to capture affective multimodal data that include cognitive, behavioural and physiological information''. In order to deal with the affect management complete cycle, thus covering affect detection, modelling and feedback, there is lack of standards and consolidated methodologies. Being our goal to develop realistic affect-aware learning environments, we are exploring different approaches on how these can be supported by either by traditional non-intrusive interaction sources or low intrusive and inexpensive sensing devices. In this work we describe the main issues involved in two user studies carried out with high school learners, highlight some open problems that arose when designing the corresponding experimental settings. In particular, the studies involved varied nature of information sources and each focused on one of the approaches. Our experience reflects the need to develop an extensive knowledge about the organization of this type of experiences that consider user-centric development and evaluation methodologies.
  • Publicación
    An Approach for an Affective Educational Recommendation Model
    (Springer, 2014-01-01) Santos, Olga C.; González Boticario, Jesús; Manjarrés Riesco, Ángeles
    There is agreement in the literature that affect influences learning. In turn, addressing affective issues in the recommendation process has shown their ability to increase the performance of recommender systems in non-educational scenarios. In our work, we combine both research lines and describe the SAERS approach to model affective educational recommendations. This affective recommendation model has been initially validated with the application of the TORMES methodology to specific educational settings. We report 29 recommendations elicited in 12 scenarios by applying this methodology. Moreover, a UML formalized version of the recommendations model which can describe the recommendations elicited is presented in the paper.
  • Publicación
    Alf : un entorno abierto para el desarrollo de comunidades virtuales de trabajo y cursos adaptados a la educación superior
    (2005-02-23) Raffenne, Emmanuelle; Aguado, M.; Arroyo, D.; Cordova, M. A.; Guzmán Sánchez, José Luis; Hermira, S.; Ortíz, J.; Pesquera, A.; Morales, R.; Romojaro Gómez, Héctor; Valiente, S.; Carmona, G.; Tejedor, D.; Alejo, J. A.; García Saiz, Tomás; González Boticario, Jesús; Pastor Vargas, Rafael
    Alf, entorno de trabajo, comunidades virtuales, enseñanza superior
  • Publicación
    MAMIPEC - Affective modeling in inclusive personalized educational scenarios
    (IEEE Technical Committee on Learning Technology,, 2012) Santos, Olga C.; González Boticario, Jesús; Arevalillo Herráez, Miguel; Saneiro Silva, María del Mar; Cabestrero Alonso, Raúl; Campo Adrián, María del Campo; Manjarrés Riesco, Ángeles; Moreno Clarí, Paloma; Quirós Expósito, Pilar; Salmeron Majadas, Sergio
    There is agreement in the literature that affect influences learning. In turn, addressing affective issues in the recommendation process has shown their ability to increase the performance of recommender systems in non-educational scenarios. In our work, we combine both research lines and describe the SAERS approach to model affective educational recommendations. This affective recommendation model has been initially validated with the application of the TORMES methodology to specific educational settings. We report 29 recommendations elicited in 12 scenarios by applying this methodology. Moreover, a UML formalized version of the recommendations model which can describe the recommendations elicited is presented in the paper.
  • Publicación
    Fundamentos de la virtualización : experiencia en investigación y formación del profesorado
    (Facultad de Ciencias UNED, 2001-02-23) González Boticario, Jesús
  • Publicación
    A domain-independent, transferable and timely analysis approach to assess student collaboration
    (World Scientific Publishing, 2013) Rodríguez Anaya, Antonio; González Boticario, Jesús
    Collaborative learning environments require intensive, regular and frequent analysis of the increasing amount of interaction data generated by students to assess that collaborative learning takes place. To support timely assessments that may benefit students and teachers the method of analysis must provide meaningful evaluations while the interactions take place. This research proposes machine learning-based techniques to infer the relationship between student collaboration and some quantitative domain-independent statistical indicators derived from large-scale evaluation analysis of student interactions. This paper (i) compares a set of metrics to identify the most suitable to assess student collaboration, (ii) reports on student evaluations of the metacognitive tools that display collaboration assessments from a new collaborative learning experience and (iii) extends previous findings to clarify modeling and usage issues. The advantages of the approach are: (1) it is based on domain-independent and generally observable features, (2) it provides regular and frequent data mining analysis with minimal teacher or student intervention, thereby supporting metacognition for the learners and corrective actions for the teachers, and (3) it can be easily transferred to other e-learning environments and include transferability features that are intended to facilitate its usage in other collaborative and social learning tools.
  • Publicación
    Supporting growers with recommendations in redvides: some human aspects involved
    (Springer Nature, 2014-10-10) Santos, Olga C.; Salmeron Majadas, Sergio; González Boticario, Jesús
    This paper discusses some human aspects that are to be considered when designing recommendations for RedVides, a cloud based networking environment that collects the status of the crop with sensors and can take decisions through corresponding actuators. The goal behind is to support growers in decision making processes, which can be benefited from collaborations among growers and with other stakeholders.
  • Publicación
    Fusion of physiological signals for modeling driver awareness levels in conditional autonomous vehicles using semi-supervised learning
    (IEEE, 2024-10-11) Fernandez Matellan, Raul; Puertas Ramírez, David; Martín Gómez, David; González Boticario, Jesús
    The evolution of autonomous vehicles (AVs) requires a paradigm shift towards the integration of human factors to improve safety and efficiency at levels 2,3 and 4 of automation. This paper presents a comparison of three different fusion technologies (Low-Level fusion, Medium-Level fusion, and a hybrid fusion), highlighting the critical role of multimodal data integration and semi-supervised learning in predicting and adapting to levels of driver awareness. Our approach uses semi-supervised learning to deal with the data labelling problem, using unlabelled data to train an autoencoder and sparsely labelled data to train a 4-state classifier. Our model facilitates the fusion of data from different physiological signals, including skin electrodermal activity, heart rate, body temperature and acceleration. Using real driving data, the Medium-Level fusion approach gives the best performance, achieving 84% accuracy in predicting situations where the user may not be aware enough to take control of the vehicle. This research highlights the essential nature of fusion technologies to create adaptive and user-centred AV systems.