Title
The interaction of children's concepts about agents and their ability to use an agent-based tutoring system
Abstract
Computer-based teachable agents are a promising compliment to classroom instruction. However, little is known about how children think about these artificial agents. In this study, we investigated children's concepts about the intentionality of a software agent they had interacted with and tested whether these concepts would change in response to exposure to the agent. We also tested whether individual differences in concepts about agent intentionality would affect children's ability to learn from the agent. After repeated exposure to a teachable agent, students did not make more intentional attributions for the agent than a computer, but a general understanding of agency predicted success in learning from the agent. Understanding basic concepts about agency appears to be an important part of the successful design, implementation, and effectiveness of computer-based learning environments.
Year
DOI
Venue
2011
10.1007/978-3-642-21619-0_70
HCI (4)
Keywords
Field
DocType
basic concept,software agent,computer-based teachable agent,repeated exposure,classroom instruction,general understanding,computer-based learning environment,artificial agent,agent intentionality,agent-based tutoring system,teachable agent
Intelligent agent,Intentionality,Embodied agent,Computer science,Theory of mind,Software agent,Human–computer interaction,Attribution
Conference
Volume
ISSN
Citations 
6764
0302-9743
1
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.38
2
5
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Alicia M. Hymel110.72
Daniel T. Levin2325.97
Jonathan Barrett310.38
Megan M. Saylor4165.23
Gautam Biswas51594233.43