Anticipatory Models of Cognitive Processes for Real-Time Action Decisions
Wed-HS1-Talk VI-02
Presented by: Nele Russwinkel
Cognitive models within a cognitive architecture such as ACT-R simulate cognitive processes involved in a given task. Anticipatory models rather try to trace the cognitive state of the participant during task execution that include the goals and subgoals, but also information processed and situation understanding, while the task is executed.
Anticipatory models are different in the way that they receive information about incoming (information perceived) and outgoing events (measured events such as gaze shifts, BCI, motor actions, …) while the participant works on the task.
Such anticipatory models (e.g., also using cognitive architectures) can close the gap between psychological experiments and theory driven modelling approaches by testing theories on individual traces of interactions in real time. This type of model not just enables a deeper understanding how humans interact in complex dynamic environments but also sheds light on individual behavior that evolves on prior decisions and environmental factors and on human in-the-loop decision making.
Examples of research that involves such models will be given for interactive tasks, such as anticipation of individuals in sequential decision tasks, anticipation of airplane pilots, for take-over situations in highly automated driving and for human robot interaction.
It will be discussed how these models can contribute to exiting research and what challenges still needs to be faced e.g., to adjust evaluation procedures taking into consideration individual traces.
Anticipatory models are different in the way that they receive information about incoming (information perceived) and outgoing events (measured events such as gaze shifts, BCI, motor actions, …) while the participant works on the task.
Such anticipatory models (e.g., also using cognitive architectures) can close the gap between psychological experiments and theory driven modelling approaches by testing theories on individual traces of interactions in real time. This type of model not just enables a deeper understanding how humans interact in complex dynamic environments but also sheds light on individual behavior that evolves on prior decisions and environmental factors and on human in-the-loop decision making.
Examples of research that involves such models will be given for interactive tasks, such as anticipation of individuals in sequential decision tasks, anticipation of airplane pilots, for take-over situations in highly automated driving and for human robot interaction.
It will be discussed how these models can contribute to exiting research and what challenges still needs to be faced e.g., to adjust evaluation procedures taking into consideration individual traces.
Keywords: Cognitive modelling, anticipation, applied, tracing