Title :
Agents, emergence, emotion and representation
Author :
Davis, Darryl N.
Author_Institution :
Dept. de Comput. Sci., Quebec Univ., Hull, Que., Canada
Abstract :
This paper analyses issues pertaining to the relation between computational emergence and emotion in cognitive agent systems. We consider how a developing computational theory of cognition can be used to monitor and manage interactions with and within complex systems. Goal-based agent systems sometimes need to postpone or abandon important goals in favor of more immediate concerns. In more sophisticated goal-based agent systems goals may need to be abandoned due to conflict of motivations. This can lead to the emergence of perturbant behavior analogous in type to (negative) emotion-litre states. Agent systems need mechanisms to recognize this type of scenario or otherwise risk compromising their design rationale. Through the development and use of a dynamic representation of emotion, a computational agent can harness unwanted and emergent states and behaviors before the agent system becomes dysfunctional. A comparison is made between emergent computational states and emotional states. This paper weaves these threads together in a consideration of the nature of sophisticated dynamic representations (e.g. goals and motivations), emotion and philosophical issues related to the modeling of cognitive agent systems and the relevance in future computational systems responsible for complex human machine interactions
Keywords :
cognitive systems; philosophical aspects; software agents; cognition theory; cognitive agent systems; complex human-machine interactions; complex systems; computational emergence; computational emotion; dynamic emotion representation; goal-based agent systems; interaction management; interaction monitoring; motivations; perturbant behavior; philosophical issues; Cognition; Computational modeling; Computer science; Computerized monitoring; Disaster management; Humans; Knowledge based systems; Silicon; Technology management; Yarn;
Conference_Titel :
Industrial Electronics Society, 2000. IECON 2000. 26th Annual Confjerence of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Nagoya
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6456-2
DOI :
10.1109/IECON.2000.972404