Smiles during intense negative affect in Holocaust survivor testimonies improve emotional valence trajectories across audio, eye gaze, and text modalities while reducing eye dynamics.
In Interspeech 2025
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
2
Pith papers citing it
citation-role summary
other 1
citation-polarity summary
fields
cs.MM 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2roles
other 1polarities
unclear 1representative citing papers
Eye movements during Holocaust survivor interviews vary by episodic, semantic, affective and temporal memory dimensions, with pre-onset gaze sufficient to predict sentence temporal context.
citing papers explorer
-
Smiling Regulates Emotion During Traumatic Recollection
Smiles during intense negative affect in Holocaust survivor testimonies improve emotional valence trajectories across audio, eye gaze, and text modalities while reducing eye dynamics.
-
Looking Into the Past: Eye Movements Characterize Elements of Autobiographical Recall in Interviews with Holocaust Survivors
Eye movements during Holocaust survivor interviews vary by episodic, semantic, affective and temporal memory dimensions, with pre-onset gaze sufficient to predict sentence temporal context.