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<xep>
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<header>
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<title>User Mood</title>
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<abstract>This specification defines an XMPP protocol extension for communicating information about user moods.</abstract>
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<abstract>This specification defines a payload format for communicating information about user moods, such as whether a person is currently happy, sad, angy, or annoyed. The payload format is typically transported using the personal eventing profile of XMPP publish-subscribe as specified in XEP-0163.</abstract>
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&LEGALNOTICE;
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<number>0107</number>
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</section2>
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</section1>
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<section1 topic='Mood Values' anchor='moods'>
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<p>There exist various theories of human affect, mood, and emotion, including those promulgated by Frijda <note>Frijda, N. 1986. <cite>The Emotions</cite>. New York: Cambridge University Press.</note>, Ortony et al. <note>Ortony, A., Clore, G., and Collins, A. 1988. <cite>The Cognitive Structure of Emotions</cite>. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.</note>, and Wierzbicka <note>Wierzbicka, A. 1992. Defining Emotion Concepts. <cite>Cognitive Science</cite> 16: 539-581.</note>. The taxonomy provided here mostly follows the Affective Knowledge Representation that has been defined by Lisetti <note>Lisetti, C. 2002. Personality, Affect, and Emotion Taxonomy for Socially Intelligent Agents. In <cite>Proceedings of FLAIRS 2002</cite>. Menlo Park, CA: AAAI Press.</note> in an effort to harmonize the prevailing theories in this area. Furthermore, the taxonomy provided here includes a number of physical states in addition to moods, and also takes into account the specific context of instant messaging, including work done by other standards development organizations (e.g., the Wireless Village specifications contributed to the &OMA;) and instant messaging service providers (e.g., ICQ).</p>
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<p>There exist various theories of human affect, mood, and emotion, including those promulgated by Frijda <note>Frijda, N. 1986. <cite>The Emotions</cite>. New York: Cambridge University Press.</note>, Ortony et al. <note>Ortony, A., Clore, G., and Collins, A. 1988. <cite>The Cognitive Structure of Emotions</cite>. Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.</note>, and Wierzbicka <note>Wierzbicka, A. 1992. Defining Emotion Concepts. <cite>Cognitive Science</cite> 16: 539-581.</note>. The taxonomy provided here mostly follows the Affective Knowledge Representation that has been defined by Lisetti <note>Lisetti, C. 2002. Personality, Affect, and Emotion Taxonomy for Socially Intelligent Agents. In <cite>Proceedings of FLAIRS 2002</cite>. Menlo Park, CA: AAAI Press.</note> in an effort to harmonize the prevailing theories in this area, as well as some work by Wierzbicka on cross-cultural studies of emotion. <note>Wierzbicka, A. 1999. <cite>Emotions across Languages and Cultures</cite>. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.</note> Furthermore, the taxonomy provided here includes a number of common physical states in addition to moods, and also takes into account the specific context of instant messaging, including work done by other standards development organizations (e.g., the Wireless Village specifications contributed to the &OMA;) and instant messaging service providers (e.g., ICQ). Finally, lists of moods and physical states have been checked for commonality against studies of word frequency in the English language <note>Leech, G., Rayson, P., and Wilson, A. 2001. <cite>Word Frequencies in Written and Spoken English</cite>. Harlow, England: Pearson Education.</note> to remove rarely used terms.</p>
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<p>The mood values defined in this taxonomy are as follows:</p>
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<ul>
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<li>afraid</li>
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