PCT and Beyond: Towards a Computational Framework for `Intelligent' Communicative Systems
Prof. Roger K. Moore

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new computational framework for intelligent communicative systems inspired by Perceptual Control Theory, integrating generative models to enhance autonomous agents' speech and language capabilities.
Contribution
It introduces an extended PCT-based architecture that incorporates generative models, offering a unified approach to designing socially interactive autonomous systems.
Findings
PCT can be extended with generative models for perception.
A symmetric architecture for needs-driven communicative agents is proposed.
Perception as simulation of behavior is a key insight.
Abstract
Recent years have witnessed increasing interest in the potential benefits of `intelligent' autonomous machines such as robots. Honda's Asimo humanoid robot, iRobot's Roomba robot vacuum cleaner and Google's driverless cars have fired the imagination of the general public, and social media buzz with speculation about a utopian world of helpful robot assistants or the coming robot apocalypse! However, there is a long way to go before autonomous systems reach the level of capabilities required for even the simplest of tasks involving human-robot interaction - especially if it involves communicative behaviour such as speech and language. Of course the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has made great strides in these areas, and has moved on from abstract high-level rule-based paradigms to embodied architectures whose operations are grounded in real physical environments. What is still…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEmbodied and Extended Cognition · Action Observation and Synchronization · Cognitive Science and Education Research
MethodsPerceptual control theoretic architecture
