Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Intelligent Virtual Environments for Agents

Intelligent Virtual Environments for Agents

Slides from a talk I gave at the 2002 Australian Cognitive Science Conference which was held in Fremantle, Western Australia.

The talk was about designing virtual environments (particularly in multi-agent simulations) to make them accessible and amenable to intelligent cognitive agents.

The slides were converted from Powerpoint to LaTeX Beamer.

Michael Papasimeon

September 25, 2002
Tweet

More Decks by Michael Papasimeon

Other Decks in Research

Transcript

  1. Intelligent Virtual Environments for Agents 2002 Australian Cognitive Science Conference

    Michael Papasimeon 25 September 2002 Fremantle, Western Australia Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 1 / 19
  2. Overall Aim and Hypothesis Aim To allow agents to participate

    in a richer, more complex and more intelligent way in their environment in the framework of an explainable and plausible cognitive model. Hypothesis Current agents are limited by their environmental interaction. We can attempt to change this by improving the way in which agents interact with their environment. Herb Simon (1969) ”Complexity of an ant’s behaviour walking along a beach has more to do with the complexity of the environment rather than an inherent internal complexity of the ant itself.” Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 2 / 19
  3. Definitions: Agent Russell and Norvig Artificial Intellligence – pg 31,

    1995 ”An agent is anything that can be viewed as perceiving its environment through sensors and acting upon that environment through effectors.” d’Inverno and Luck Understanding Agent Systems – pg 2, 2001 ”... agents have been proposed as situated and embedded problem solvers that are capable of functioning effectively and efficiently in a complex environment.” Wooldrdige Multiagent Systems - pg 29, 1999 - editor G. Weiss ”An agent is a computer system that is situated in some environment and that is capable of autonomous action in this environment in order to meet its design objectives.” Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 3 / 19
  4. Definition: Environment Agents can be situated in different types of

    environments: Real Virtual We are interested in synthetic (spatial and temporal) environments that are representations of real or fictional worlds: Simulations Interactive Entertainment Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 4 / 19
  5. Definition: Intelligent ...as in Artificial Intelligence. Including perception, reasoning and

    action. Components of a software system that contains ”smarts”: Components which use traditional AI algorithms Components which are models of human cognitive processes. Research in multi-agent systems suggest that these types of processes belong in the agent. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 6 / 19
  6. Designing Intelligent Information Systems Limited representation of the environment in

    classical artificial intelligence. Then agents came along... agent could live in, perceive, reason and act in their environment. Many agents became quite large and heavyweight and exhibit properties of classical AI systems. ”Intelligence” belongs in the agent? The software design spectrum – where to put the intelligence in an intelligent system? Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 7 / 19
  7. Real Environments: Augmentation Augmenting real environments for a purpose Head

    Up Displays and Helmet Mounted Sights The Road and Traffic System Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 8 / 19
  8. Classical AI vs Situated Cognition Classical AI vs Situated Cognition

    Classical View of Mind Situated Cognition Individual Social Rational Embodied Abstract Concrete Detached Located General Specific It is claimed that agents are situated given that they can perceive and act in an environment. However: Most agent designs don’t have the characteristics espoused by the situated cognition community. Most agent designs ignore the environment and are detached (reasoning is separate from perception and action). Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 9 / 19
  9. Ideas for Designing Virtual Environments Situated Cognition (Clancy, Suchman) Cognitve

    Systems (Hutchence) – Boeing 747 Example Ecological Psychology (Gibson) – Affordances Labelling of Entities in the Environment by: Name, Category Affordance Relationships Purpose or Intention of Agens Consider a motor racing simulation/game... Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 10 / 19
  10. Intelligent Agent: Low Level Perception One extreme is to make

    the agent do everything starting with low level perception Agent needs to perceive geometry, colour, lighting, material, motion and then recognise high level objects such as roads etc. Advantage: agent is portable to many types of environments. Disadvantage: computationally expensive, a lot of engineering is spent designing low level processing. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 11 / 19
  11. Environmental Representation Options Agent driving a virtual car around a

    virtual racing track... The environment consists of a track, other cars, obstacles, team-mates, marshals, the pits, pit-crew, team-boss, spectators. What our virtual environment representation options? Intelligent Agents Intelligent Environments ”Intelligence” is shared between agents and environments. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 14 / 19
  12. Labels, Names, Categories and Plans We can label things in

    different ways. As cars, roads, buildings, traffic lights. As opponents, pedestrians and other drivers, or everything is an obstacle to the agent winning! Parts of the environment can be labelled. For example, consider labelling a corner: As a left/right tight turn With prescription: ”Take this corner at 60-75 km/h, in 3rd gear in a gentle left hand turn.” Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 16 / 19
  13. Relationships in the Environment Can the agent driver query the

    environmnet about relationships? ”Who is in front of me?” ”Who is behind me?” How about more complex relationships that are dynamic? ”Do I have an overtaking opportunity?” Relationships between team members. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 17 / 19
  14. Affordances in Crazy Taxi Premise is to pickup fare paying

    passengers. The quickest route to the destination, the more money the passenger will pay. Passengers tip extra for crazy stunts and tricks. Certain buildings afford picking up passengers. Objects in the the city afford doing stunts (like ramps for jumps). Different road surfaces afford going faster. All sorts of things afford being a short-cut. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 18 / 19
  15. Summary Agent interactions with the environment aren’t as interesting or

    complicated as they could be. Virtual environments and agents can be designed (unlike real environments). Exploring the ”agent-environment” interface allows us to investigate alternative ways of intelligent agents in virtual environments. We can use ideas from cognitive science to ground our designs in theory of situated cognition. This will help us build environments in which agents and humans can interact. Michael Papasimeon Intelligent Virtual Environments OZCOGSCI 2002 19 / 19