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Memory-Centred Cognitive Architectures for Robots Interacting Socially with Humans

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-09, 17:56 authored by Paul BaxterPaul Baxter

The Memory-Centred Cognition perspective places an active association substrate at the heart of cognition, rather than as a passive adjunct. Consequently, it places prediction and priming on the basis of prior experience to be inherent and fundamental aspects of processing. Social interaction is taken here to minimally require contingent and co-adaptive behaviours from the interacting parties. In this contribution, I seek to show how the memory-centred cognition approach to cognitive architectures can provide an means of addressing these functions. A number of example implementations are briefly reviewed, particularly focusing on multi-modal alignment as a function of experience-based priming. While there is further refinement required to the theory, and implementations based thereon, this approach provides an interesting alternative perspective on the foundations of cognitive architectures to support robots engage in social interactions with humans.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Computer Science (Research Outputs)

Date Submitted

2018-10-20

Date Accepted

2016-02-18

Date of First Publication

2016-02-18

Date of Final Publication

2016-02-18

Event Name

2nd Workshop on Cognitive Architectures for Social Human-Robot Interaction at HRI'16

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-12-21

ePrints ID

30202

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