Huffman, S.B. and Laird, J.E. (1995)
"Flexibly Instructable Agents",
Volume 3, pages 271-324.
Abstract: This paper presents an approach to learning from situated,
interactive tutorial instruction within an ongoing agent. Tutorial
instruction is a flexible (and thus powerful) paradigm for teaching
tasks because it allows an instructor to communicate whatever types of
knowledge an agent might need in whatever situations might arise. To
support this flexibility, however, the agent must be able to learn
multiple kinds of knowledge from a broad range of instructional
interactions. Our approach, called situated explanation, achieves
such learning through a combination of analytic and inductive
techniques. It combines a form of explanation-based learning that is
situated for each instruction with a full suite of contextually guided
responses to incomplete explanations. The approach is implemented in
an agent called Instructo-Soar that learns hierarchies of new tasks
and other domain knowledge from interactive natural language
instructions. Instructo-Soar meets three key requirements of flexible
instructability that distinguish it from previous systems: (1) it can
take known or unknown commands at any instruction point; (2) it can
handle instructions that apply to either its current situation or to a
hypothetical situation specified in language (as in, for instance,
conditional instructions); and (3) it can learn, from instructions,
each class of knowledge it uses to perform tasks.
Click here to return to the JAIR home page.