Socially Situated Planning

Abstract

Virtual environments such as training simulators and video games do an impressive job at modeling the physical dynamics of synthetic worlds but fall short when modeling the social dynamics of anything but the most impoverished human encounters. Yet the social dimension is at least as important as good graphics for creating an engaging game or effective training tool. Commercial flight simulators accurately model the technical aspects of flight but many aviation disasters arise from social breakdowns: poor management skills in the cockpit, or the effects of stress and emotion. Perhaps the biggest consumer of simulation technology, the U.S. military, identifies unrealistic human and organizational behavior as a major limitation of existing simulation technology (NRC, 1998). And of course the entertainment industry has long recognized the importance of good character, emotional attachment and rich social interactions to "put butts in seats." This article describes a research effort to endow virtual training environments with richer models of social behavior. We have been developing autonomous andsemi-autonomous software agents that plan and act while situated in a social network of other entities, human and synthetic (Hill et. al, 1997; Tambe, 1997; Gratch and Hill, 1999). My work has focused on making agents act in an organization and obey social constraints, coordinate their behavior, negotiate conflicts, but also obey their own self-interest and show a range of individual differences in their behavior and willingness to violate social norms, albeit within the relatively narrow context of a specific training exercise.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2002
Accession Number
AD1171495

Entities

People

  • Jonathan Gratch

Organizations

  • University of Southern California

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Autonomy
  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cognition
  • Command And Control
  • Computer Programming
  • Computers
  • Environment
  • Flight Simulators
  • Human Behavior
  • Intelligent Agents
  • Joints
  • Language
  • Military Operations
  • Personality
  • Reasoning
  • Simulations
  • Simulators
  • Social Networks
  • Software Agents
  • Training
  • Virtual Reality

Readers

  • Agent-Based Social Robotics and Mobile-Assisted Learning in Virtual Environments.
  • Educational Psychology