Hatice Gunes | |
Nationality: | Turkish |
Workplaces: | University of Cambridge Queen Mary University of London Alan Turing Institute |
Alma Mater: | University of Technology Sydney Yıldız Technical University |
Thesis Title: | Vision-based multimodal analysis of affective face and upper-body behaviour |
Thesis Url: | http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/271213807 |
Thesis Year: | 2007 |
Hatice Gunes is a Turkish computer scientist who is Professor of Affective Intelligence & Robotics at the University of Cambridge. Gunes leads the Affective Intelligence & Robotics Lab. Her research considers human robot interactions and the development of sophisticated technologies with emotional intelligence.
Gunes was an undergraduate student at the Yıldız Technical University. She moved to the University of Technology Sydney for her doctoral research, where she was awarded the Australian Government International Postgraduate Research Scholarship (IPRS) to focus on vision and machine learning based analysis of affective face and upper body behaviour.[1] [2] Her doctoral research showed that affective face and body displays are simultaneous but not strictly synchronous; explicit detection of temporal phases (onset-apex-offset) can improve the accuracy of affect recognition; recognition from fused face and body modalities performs better than that from the face or the body modality alone; and synchronized feature-level fusion achieves better performance than decision-level fusion.[3] She created the Bimodal Face and Body Gesture Database (FABO), a collection of labelled videos of posed, affective face and body displays for automatic analysis of human nonverbal affective behavior.[4] After earning her doctorate, she was appointed an Australian Research Council postdoctoral fellow, and worked on airport and railway security through object human tracking. In 2008, Gunes moved to Imperial College London, where she worked alongside Maja Pantić in the Intelligent Behaviour Understanding Group (iBUG).[5] [6] The project looked to build a dialogue system that can interact with humans via a virtual character.[7]
In 2011, Gunes was appointed a lecturer at Queen Mary University of London. She remained there for four years, becoming an associate professor in 2014. She moved to the University of Cambridge in 2016, where she was promoted to a Professor of Affective Intelligence and Robotics. In 2019, she was awarded an Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council fellowship, and was appointed a Faculty Fellow of the Alan Turing Institute.[8] Her fellowship considered human–robot interactions and the development of robot emotional intelligence through the study of human-human interactions.[9] She investigated the relationships between humans and their companion robots and looked to design robots with enhanced socio-emotional skills.
Gunes was appointed President of the Association for the Advancement of Affective Computing in 2017. She is interested in how technologies can enhance a sense of wellbeing, through affective VR, autonomous and tele-presence social robotics.[10]