Memory-Augmented Theory of Mind Network
This work addresses social reasoning for AI agents, particularly in scenarios requiring inference through multiple steps of changes, representing an incremental improvement with a novel method for a known bottleneck.
The paper tackles the challenge of theory of mind (ToM) reasoning in complex behavioral spaces by equipping an observer with neural memory mechanisms and hierarchical attention, resulting in ToMMY, a model that achieves better performance on high-demand false-belief tasks.
Social reasoning necessitates the capacity of theory of mind (ToM), the ability to contextualise and attribute mental states to others without having access to their internal cognitive structure. Recent machine learning approaches to ToM have demonstrated that we can train the observer to read the past and present behaviours of other agents and infer their beliefs (including false beliefs about things that no longer exist), goals, intentions and future actions. The challenges arise when the behavioural space is complex, demanding skilful space navigation for rapidly changing contexts for an extended period. We tackle the challenges by equipping the observer with novel neural memory mechanisms to encode, and hierarchical attention to selectively retrieve information about others. The memories allow rapid, selective querying of distal related past behaviours of others to deliberatively reason about their current mental state, beliefs and future behaviours. This results in ToMMY, a theory of mind model that learns to reason while making little assumptions about the underlying mental processes. We also construct a new suite of experiments to demonstrate that memories facilitate the learning process and achieve better theory of mind performance, especially for high-demand false-belief tasks that require inferring through multiple steps of changes.