AzevedoR.MorrowD.GraumlichJ.Willemsen-DunlapA.Hasegawa-JohnsonM.HuangT. S.GuK.BhatS.SakakiniT.SadauskasV.HalpinD. J. (2018). Using conversational agents to explain medication instructions to older adults. AMIA Annual Symposium proceedings, 185–194.
2.
BoersmaP.WeeninkD. (2020). Praat: doing phonetics by computer [Computer program]. Version 6.1.31, retrieved 12November2020 from http://www.praat.org/
3.
ElkinsA.DerrickD. (2013). The sound of trust: Voice as a measurement of trust during interactions with embodied conversational agents. Group Decision and Negotiation, 22(5), 897–913.
4.
MadhavanP.WiegmannD. A. (2007). Similarities and differences between human-human and human-automation trust: An integrative review. Theoretical Issues in Ergonomics Science, 8(4), 277–301.
RheuM.ShinJ. Y.PengW.Huh-YooJ. (2021). Systematic review: Trust-Building factors and implications for conversational agent design. International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction, 37(1), 81–96
7.
SchirmerA.FengY.SenA.PenneyT. B. (2019). Angry, old, male – and trustworthy? How expressive and person voice characteristics shape listener trust. PloS One, 14(1), e0210555.
8.
TsantaniM. S.BelinP.PatersonH. M.McAleerP. (2016). Low vocal pitch preference drives first impressions irrespective of context in male voices but not in female voices. Perception, 45(8), 946–963.