Felicity Conditions for Human Skill Acquisition: Validating an AI (Artificial Intelligence)-Based Theory.

Abstract

A theory of how people learn certain procedural skills is presented. It is based on the idea that the teaching and learning that goes on in a classroom is like an ordinary conversation. The speaker (teacher) compresses a non-linear knowledge structure (the target procedure) into a linear sequence of utterances (lessons). The listener (student) constructs a knowledge structure (the learned procedure) from the utterance sequence (lesson sequence). In recent years, linguists have discovered that speakers unknowingly obey certain constraints on the sequential form of their utterances. Apparently, these tacit conventions, called felicity conditions or conversational postulates, help listeners construct an appropriate knowledge structure from the utterance sequence. The analogy between conversations and classrooms suggests that there might be felicity conditions on lesson sequences that help students learn procedures. This research has shown that there are. For the particular kind of skill acquisition studied here, three felicity conditions were discovered. They are the central hypotheses in the learning theory. The theory has been embedded in a model, a large computer program that uses artificial intelligence (AI) techniques. The model's performance has been compared to data from several thousand students learning ordinary mathematical procedures: subtracting multidigit numbers, adding fractions and solving simple algebraic equations. A key criterion for the theory is that the set of procedures that the model learns should exactly match the set of procedure that students actually acquire, including their buggy procedures. (Author)

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Nov 01, 1983
Accession Number
ADA137414

Entities

People

  • K. Vanlehn

Organizations

  • PARC

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • C4I
  • Cyber
  • Energy and Power Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Air Force
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Science
  • Computational Science
  • Computer Languages
  • Computer Programming
  • Computer Programs
  • Computer Science
  • Computers
  • Databases
  • Failure Mode And Effect Analysis
  • Grammars
  • Information Processing
  • Linguistics
  • Military Research
  • Psychology

Fields of Study

  • Education

Readers

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Calculus or Mathematical Analysis
  • Speech Processing/Speech Recognition.

Technology Areas

  • AI & ML
  • AI & ML - Machine Learning Algorithms