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How Emotions and Personality Effect the Utility of Alternative Decisions: A Terrorist Target Selection Case Study

Michael Johns, University of Pennsylvania
Barry G. Silverman, University of Pennsylvania

Article comments

Postprint version. Published in Tenth Conference On Computer Generated Forces and Behavioral Representation, May 2001, 11 pages.
Publisher URL: http://www.sisostds.org/index.php

Abstract

The role of emotion modeling in the development of computerized agents has long been unclear. This is partially due to instability in the philosophical issues of the problem as psychologists struggle to build models for their own purposes, and partially due to the often-wide gap between these theories and that which can be implemented by an agent author. This paper describes an effort to use emotion models in part as a deep model of utility for use in decision theoretic agents. This allows for the creation of simulated forces capable of balancing a great deal of competing goals, and in doing so they behave, for better or for worse, in a more realistic manner.

Suggested Citation

Michael Johns and Barry G. Silverman. "How Emotions and Personality Effect the Utility of Alternative Decisions: A Terrorist Target Selection Case Study" Center for Human Modeling and Simulation (2001).
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/barry_silverman/3