Thesis:
Narrative Intelligence for Socially Situated Creatures
My thesis research involves rethinking autonomous
agent architecture while taking seriously the idea that an agent is not
simply a self-contained technology, but a form of communication between
people. There are several important components:
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analysis of Artificial Intelligence and its relationships to industrialization
and psychiatric institutionalization;
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development of Socially Situated AI, an approach to agent design that situates
agents not only in their physical environment, but also their social and
cultural surroundings;
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design of an agent architecture, the Expressivator, which allows agent
designers to more effectively control how their agent concept is being
communicated. Agents are made more comprehensible by structuring
their behavior into narrative sequences. The Expressivator involves
3 major components:
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Behavior transitions, which connect behaviors into meaningful sequences
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Sign management, which allow agents to be constructed with reference
to and to reason about how they are being interpreted by the user
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Meta-level controls, which provide the low-level hooks by which
behaviors can coordinate their effect on the user;
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implementation of the Industrial Graveyard, a virtual environment illustrating
the concepts of the thesis and testing its technical feasibility
The technical aspects are described in more detail here.
Back to my work page.