Author/Authors :
George Veletsianos and Charles Miller، نويسنده , , Robert Heller، نويسنده , , Scott Overmyer and Mike Procter، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This paper examines the effective deployment of conversational agents in
virtual worlds from the perspective of researchers/practitioners in cognitive
psychology, computing science, learning technologies and engineering. From a
cognitive perspective, the major challenge lies in the coordination and management
of the various channels of information associated with conversation/
communication and integrating this information with the virtual space of the
environment and the belief space of the user. From computing science, the
requirements include conversational competency, use of nonverbal cues, animation
consistent with affective states, believability, domain competency and
user adaptability. From a learning technologies perspective, the challenge is to
maximise the considerable affordances provided by conversational avatars in
virtual worlds balanced against ecologically valid investigations regarding
utility. Finally, the engineering perspective focuses on the technical competency
required to implement effective and functional agents, and the associated
costs to enable student access. Taken together, the four perspectives draw
attention to the quality of the agent–user interaction, howtheory, practice and
research are closely intertwined, and the multidisciplinary nature of this area
with opportunities for cross fertilisation and collaboration