AIHCJan 20, 2020

Towards Social Identity in Socio-Cognitive Agents

arXiv:2001.07142v11 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of deploying autonomous agents alongside humans in uncontrolled settings, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing social agent architectures.

The paper tackles the challenge of designing robust social agents for diverse real-world environments by proposing a socio-cognitive agent model based on Cognitive Social Frames, which adapt cognition based on social context to support reasoning about social actors and relationships.

Current architectures for social agents are designed around some specific units of social behaviour that address particular challenges. Although their performance might be adequate for controlled environments, deploying these agents in the wild is difficult. Moreover, the increasing demand for autonomous agents capable of living alongside humans calls for the design of more robust social agents that can cope with diverse social situations. We believe that to design such agents, their sociality and cognition should be conceived as one. This includes creating mechanisms for constructing social reality as an interpretation of the physical world with social meanings and selective deployment of cognitive resources adequate to the situation. We identify several design principles that should be considered while designing agent architectures for socio-cognitive systems. Taking these remarks into account, we propose a socio-cognitive agent model based on the concept of Cognitive Social Frames that allow the adaptation of an agent's cognition based on its interpretation of its surroundings, its Social Context. Our approach supports an agent's reasoning about other social actors and its relationship with them. Cognitive Social Frames can be built around social groups, and form the basis for social group dynamics mechanisms and construct of Social Identity.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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