Social Attitudes: Investigations with Agent Simulations Using Webots
Ivica Mitrovic () and
Kerstin Dautenhahn ()
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Kerstin Dautenhahn: http://homepages.feis.herts.ac.uk/~comqkd/
Journal of Artificial Societies and Social Simulation, 2003, vol. 6, issue 4, 4
Abstract:
This article presents a multiagent simulation environment for studying agents' socio-political attitudes. It departs from a previously proposed concept of agents with socio-political attitudes, a high-level theoretical and conceptual model proposed by Petric et al (2002) that was intended for conversational agents. In contrast, our work pursues a bottom-up simulation philosophy where attitudes are grounded in sensory-motor behaviour of spatially distributed autonomous agents, modelled in Webots simulation software. The original model was extended by defining an agent's socio-political type by means of weighting the three components found in the Petric et al. (2002) model (neo-liberal, alternative and fundamentalist), thus allowing the creation of mixed socio-political types. Also, in the simulations performed, issues were modelled as agents with variable levels of importance. Moreover, we introduced inter-agent communication capable of causing changes in socio-political types. Results are presented and discussed with respect to the initial research questions. According to our experimental results the following parameters did not have any significant impact on the simulation outcomes: initial physical position and orientation of the agents, positions of the issues, the issues' dynamics, and inter-agent communication. Experiments with different initial agent types showed that agents with indeterminate socio-political types tended to change to neo-liberal, alternative or fundamentalist agents. We conclude by proposing future extensions of the model. Our work is related to a trend in the Artificial Intelligence community which is not primarily task or problem-solving oriented, but rather focuses on the study of the embodied and situated nature of social behaviour in humans.
Keywords: Agent simulation; Social simulation; Social attitudes; Social behaviour; Socio-political attitudes; Webots (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2003-10-31
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:jas:jasssj:2003-2-3
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