Will Bridewell
Will Bridewell
Home
Posts
Projects
Talks
Publications
Contact
Light
Dark
Automatic
theory of mind
Representing Deception
Development of a representation for detecting and reasoning about deception
White Lies on Silver Tongues: Why Robots Need to Deceive (and How)
It is easy to see that social robots will need the ability to detect and evaluate deceptive speech; otherwise they will be vulnerable to manipulation by malevolent humans. More surprisingly, we argue that effective social robots must also be able to produce deceptive speech.
Alistair M.C. Isaac
,
Will Bridewell
PDF
Cite
DOI
Reasoning about Belief Revision to Change Minds: A Challenge for Cognitive Systems
We argue that, although belief revision mechanisms surely operate at the level of single agents, we must also consider the need to lift an agent’s understanding of the belief revision process to the knowledge level in order to intentionally guide other agents’ revision processes with whom it socially interacts.
Will Bridewell
,
Paul F. Bello
PDF
Cite
Mindreading Deception in Dialog
We argue that distinguishing between types of deception is required to generate successful action. We introduce a Framework for Identifying Deceptive Entities and demonstrate that it has the representational power to discriminate categories of deception.
Alistair M.C. Isaac
,
Will Bridewell
PDF
Cite
DOI
Unified Theories of Language and Cognition
Part of a multi-institutional effort to develop natural language resources for engaging in question answering and dialog.
Outlining a Computationally Plausible Approach to Mental State Ascription
Will Bridewell
,
Alistair M.C. Isaac
,
Pat Langley
Cite
×