• DocumentCode
    1638769
  • Title

    A transition model for cognitions about agency

  • Author

    Levin, D.T. ; Adams, Julie A. ; Saylor, M.M. ; Biswas, Gautam

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Psychol. & Human Dev., Vanderbilt Univ., Nashville, TN, USA
  • fYear
    2013
  • Firstpage
    373
  • Lastpage
    380
  • Abstract
    Recent research in a range of fields has explored people´s concepts about agency, and this issue is clearly important for understanding the conceptual basis of human-robot interaction. This research takes a wide range of approaches, but no systematic model of reasoning about agency has combined the concepts and processes involved agency-reasoning comprehensively enough to support research exploring issues such as conceptual change in reasoning about agents, and the interaction between concepts about agents and visual attention. Our goal in this paper is to develop a transition model of reasoning about agency that achieves three important goals. First, we aim to specify the different kinds of knowledge that is likely to be accessed when people reason about agents. Second, we specify the circumstances under which these different kinds of knowledge might be accessed and be changed. Finally, we discuss how this knowledge might affect basic psychological processes of attention and memory. Our approach will be to first describe the transition model, then to discuss how it might be applied in two specific domains: computer interfaces that allow a single operator to track multiple robots, and a teachable agent system currently in use assisting primary and middle school students in learning natural science concepts.
  • Keywords
    cognition; computer interfaces; educational institutions; educational robots; human-robot interaction; inference mechanisms; mobile agents; psychology; teaching; agency-reasoning; agent reasoning; cognition transition model; computer interfaces; human-robot interaction; middle school students; natural science concept learning; people concepts; primary school students; psychological attention processes; psychological memory processes; systematic reasoning model; teachable agent system; visual attention; Cognition; Computers; Educational institutions; Legged locomotion; Psychology; Switches; Concepts; HRI; Theory of Mind;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Human-Robot Interaction (HRI), 2013 8th ACM/IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Tokyo
  • ISSN
    2167-2121
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-3099-2
  • Electronic_ISBN
    2167-2121
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/HRI.2013.6483612
  • Filename
    6483612