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/}
}