Why is interaction so simple? This article presents a theory of interaction based on the use of shared representations as "coordination tools" (e.g., roundabouts that facilitate coordination of drivers). By aligning their representations (intentionally or unintentionally), interacting agents help one another to solve interaction problems in that they remain predictable, and offer cues for action selection and goal monitoring. We illustrate how this strategy works in a joint task (building together a tower of bricks) and discuss its requirements from a computational viewpoint.

Shared representations as coordination tools for interactions

Pezzulo;Giovanni
2011

Abstract

Why is interaction so simple? This article presents a theory of interaction based on the use of shared representations as "coordination tools" (e.g., roundabouts that facilitate coordination of drivers). By aligning their representations (intentionally or unintentionally), interacting agents help one another to solve interaction problems in that they remain predictable, and offer cues for action selection and goal monitoring. We illustrate how this strategy works in a joint task (building together a tower of bricks) and discuss its requirements from a computational viewpoint.
2011
Istituto di Scienze e Tecnologie della Cognizione - ISTC
shared representations
prediction
joint action
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/12544
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