Title
The Altruistic Robot: Do What I Want, Not Just What I Say.
Abstract
As autonomous robots expand their application beyond research labs and production lines, they must work in more flexible and less well defined environments. To escape the requirement for exhaustive instruction and stipulated preference ordering, a robot's operation must involve choices between alternative actions, guided by goals. We describe a robot that learns these goals from humans by considering the timeliness and context of instructions and rewards as evidence of the contours and gradients of an unknown human utility function. In turn, this underlies a choice-theory based rational preference relationship. We examine how the timing of requests, and contexts in which they arise, can lead to actions that pre-empt requests using methods we term contemporaneous entropy learning and context sensitive learning. We provide experiments on these two methods to demonstrate their usefulness in guiding a robot's actions.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.1007/978-3-319-67582-4_11
Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence
Field
DocType
Volume
Altruism,Psychology,Cognitive psychology,Robot
Conference
10564
ISSN
Citations 
PageRank 
0302-9743
0
0.34
References 
Authors
7
7
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Richard Billingsley132.08
John Billingsley200.34
Peter Gärdenfors31699183.78
Pavlos Peppas426531.74
Henri Prade5105491445.02
David B. Skillicorn6767105.19
Mary-anne Williams7953128.61