Nirenburg: Cognitive Architecture for Simulating...
Computer Science and Electrical Engineering
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
A Cognitive Architecture for
Simulating Bodies and Minds
Professor Sergei Nirenburg
University of Maryland, Baltimore County
1:00-2:15pm Friday, 18 February 2011, ITE 227, UMBC
This talk is an overview of a cognitive architecture that supports the creation and deployment of intelligent agents capable of simulating human-like abilities. The agents, have a simulated mind and may also be supplied with a simulated body. These agents are intended to operate as members of multi-agent teams featuring both artificial and human agents. The agent architecture and its underlying knowledge resources and processors are being developed in a sufficiently generic way to support a variety of applications. In this talk we briefly describe the architecture and two proof-of-concept application systems we have developed within it: the Maryland Virtual Patient (MVP) system for training medical personnel and the CLinician’s ADvisor (CLAD).We organize the discussion around four specific aspects of agent capabilities implemented in MVP and CLAD: physiological simulation, knowledge management and learning, decision-making and language processing.
This is joint work with Marjorie McShane and Stephen Beale, with contributions from Jesse English, Ben Johnson, Bryan Wilkinson and Roberta Catizone.
Posted: February 6, 2011, 1:43 PM