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Resumen de A bdi empathic agent model based on a multidimensional cross-cultural emotion representation

Joaquín José Taverner Aparicio

  • Human beings are, by nature, affective beings; our emotions, moods, personality, or relationships with others guide our motivations and our decisions. One of the main cognitive abilities related to affect is empathy. Empathy is a psychological construct whose definition has evolved over the years and whose meaning refers to a wide range of affective and cognitive competencies that are fundamental in the development of human beings as social beings.

    The use of empathy in the field of artificial intelligence can revolutionize the way we interact with machines as well as the way we simulate human behavior.

    On the other hand, it must be considered that human beings usually resort to the use of different words such as ``sad'' or ``happy'' to express or verbalize our affective state. However, these words are simplifications that cover a wide spectrum of cognitive processes and mental states. Moreover, it should be considered that these words have a high dependence on the language and culture in which they are used. Therefore, computational representation models of affective states must adaptable to different cultural environments and to allow an agent to express or represent, by means of words, a given affective state.

    In this thesis, a new model of empathic agent capable of adapting its behavior to different cultural environments is proposed. To this end, first, a new experiment-based methodology to adapt an emotion representation space based on the dimensions of pleasure and arousal for simulation and affective computational recognition to different cultural environments is presented. The results of an experiment conducted with European Spanish speakers are used to provide a new fuzzy logic-based model for representing affective states in the dimensions of pleasure and arousal using a polar coordinate approach. To prove that cultural differences affect the pleasure and arousal values associated with each emotion, the experiment was replicated with Portuguese and Swedish participants.

    Secondly, a new model of emotion elicitation in affective agents using fuzzy logic is presented. The emotions generated in the agent by the fuzzy appraisal rules are expressed in the model of affect representation resulting from the previously described experiments. In addition, a new affect regulation process is proposed to adapt the agent's mood, represented by a vector in the pleasure-arousal space, when an emotion is elicited.

    Third, a formalization of the syntax, semantics and reasoning cycle of AgentSpeak to enable the development of affective agents with empathic capabilities is presented. Drawing on the theories of empathic appraisal and empathic regulation, the agent's reasoning structure is modified to allow empathy to affect the decision-making process.

    Finally, a model of an empathic pedagogical agent for education on good practices in the use of social networks is introduced. The agent is able to recognize the user's emotion when interacting with the social network. Based on the user's emotion and behavior in the social network, the agent estimates a plan to educate the user in the correct and secure use of social networks.


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