Daily Archives: July 30, 2010

For real?

When this showed up in my RSS reader this morning, my first response was, “wait, today isn’t April 1!”

Emotion Markup Language (EmotionML) 1.0

Apparently it’s serious:

As the web is becoming ubiquitous, interactive, and multimodal, technology needs to deal increasingly with human factors, including emotions. The present draft specification of Emotion Markup Language 1.0 aims to strike a balance between practical applicability and scientific well-foundedness. The language is conceived as a “plug-in” language suitable for use in three different areas: (1) manual annotation of data; (2) automatic recognition of emotion-related states from user behavior; and (3) generation of emotion-related system behavior.

I’ll believe it when I see it.