Deliberation and Its Role in the Formation of Intentions
Abstract
Deliberation plays an important role in the design of rational agents embedded in the real-world. In particular, deliberation leads to the formation of intentions, i.e., plans of action that the agent is committed to achieving. In this paper, we present a branching time possible-worlds model for representing and reasoning about, beliefs, goals, intentions, time, actions, probabilities, and payoffs. We compare this possible-worlds approach with the more traditional decision tree representation and provide a transformation from decision trees to possible worlds. Finally, we illustrate how an agent can perform deliberation using a decision-tree representation and then use a possible-worlds model to form and reason about his intentions.
Cite
Text
Rao and Georgeff. "Deliberation and Its Role in the Formation of Intentions." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 1991.Markdown
[Rao and Georgeff. "Deliberation and Its Role in the Formation of Intentions." Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence, 1991.](https://mlanthology.org/uai/1991/rao1991uai-deliberation/)BibTeX
@inproceedings{rao1991uai-deliberation,
title = {{Deliberation and Its Role in the Formation of Intentions}},
author = {Rao, Anand S. and Georgeff, Michael P.},
booktitle = {Conference on Uncertainty in Artificial Intelligence},
year = {1991},
url = {https://mlanthology.org/uai/1991/rao1991uai-deliberation/}
}