CLJun 30, 2021

Learning to communicate about shared procedural abstractions

arXiv:2107.00077v129 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of enabling intelligent agents to coordinate effectively on shared procedural abstractions, with incremental contributions to understanding human collaboration.

The study investigated how humans use natural language to coordinate on physical assembly tasks, finding that participants provided increasingly concise instructions over time by using higher-level expressions that captured hierarchical scene structure.

Many real-world tasks require agents to coordinate their behavior to achieve shared goals. Successful collaboration requires not only adopting the same communicative conventions, but also grounding these conventions in the same task-appropriate conceptual abstractions. We investigate how humans use natural language to collaboratively solve physical assembly problems more effectively over time. Human participants were paired up in an online environment to reconstruct scenes containing two block towers. One participant could see the target towers, and sent assembly instructions for the other participant to reconstruct. Participants provided increasingly concise instructions across repeated attempts on each pair of towers, using higher-level referring expressions that captured each scene's hierarchical structure. To explain these findings, we extend recent probabilistic models of ad-hoc convention formation with an explicit perceptual learning mechanism. These results shed light on the inductive biases that enable intelligent agents to coordinate upon shared procedural abstractions.

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