
From the Foreword:"In this book Joscha Bach introduces Dietrich Dörner's PSI architecture and Joscha's implementation of the MicroPSI architecture. These architectures and their implementation have several lessons for other architectures and models. Most notably, the PSI architecture includes drives and thus directly addresses questions of emotional behavior. An architecture including drives helps clarify how emotions could arise. It also changes the way that the architecture works on a fundamental level, providing an architecture more suited for behaving autonomously in a simulated world. PSI includes three types of drives, physiological (e.g., hunger), social (i.e., affiliation needs), and cognitive (i.e., reduction of uncertainty and expression of competency). These drives routinely influence goal formation and knowledge selection and application. The resulting architecture generates new kinds of behaviors, including context dependent memories, socially motivated behavior, and internally motivated task switching. This architecture illustrates how emotions and physical drives can be included in an embodied cognitive architecture.The PSI architecture, while including perceptual, motor, learning, and cognitive processing components, also includes several novel knowledge representations: temporal structures, spatial memories, and several new information processing mechanisms and behaviors, including progress through types of knowledge sources when problem solving (the Rasmussen ladder), and knowledge-based hierarchical active vision. These mechanisms and representations suggest ways for making other architectures more realistic, more accurate, and easier to use.The architecture is demonstrated in the Island simulated environment. While it may look like a simple game, it was carefully designed to allow multiple tasks to be pursued and provides ways to satisfy the multiple drives. It would be useful in its own right for developing other architectures interested in mult
This work investigates how the integration of physiological, social, and cognitive drives into a computational architecture can produce autonomous, emotionally-grounded behavior in synthetic agents. Joscha Bach presents the PSI architecture, originally developed by Dietrich Dörner, alongside his own MicroPSI implementation to demonstrate how internal motivation systems influence goal formation and knowledge selection. By grounding cognitive processing in embodied needs, the author argues that synthetic intelligence can achieve more realistic and adaptive behavior within simulated environments.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to the field of cognitive modeling, particularly for its focus on the intersection of motivation and intelligence. Readers frequently note the technical density of the prose, which serves as a foundational resource for researchers building autonomous, goal-oriented systems.
Page Count:
400
Publication Date:
2009-04-06
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195370678
ISBN-13:
9780195370676
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