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Social Judgment in Multiagent Interactions
New York City, New York, USA July 19-July 23
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/AAMAS.2004.10064Third International Joint Conference ...
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Wenji Mao, University of Southern California
Jonathan Gratch, University of Southern California
Social judgment is a process of social explanation whereby one evaluates which entities deserve credit or blame for multiagent activities. Such explanations are a key aspect of inference in a social environment and a model of this process can advance several design components of multi-agent systems. Social judgment underlies social planning, social learning, natural language pragmatics and computational model of emotion. Based on psychological attribution theory, this paper presents a computational approach to forming social judgment based on an agent?s causal knowledge and communicative interactions with other agents.
Citation:
Wenji Mao, Jonathan Gratch, "Social Judgment in Multiagent Interactions," aamas, vol. 1, pp.210-217, Third International Joint Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems - Volume 1 (AAMAS'04), 2004
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