Narrative for Artifacts: Transcending Context and Self (1999)
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BibTeX
@MISC{Nehaniv99narrativefor,
author = {Chrystopher L. Nehaniv},
title = {Narrative for Artifacts: Transcending Context and Self},
year = {1999}
}
Years of Citing Articles
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Abstract
We discuss the importance of narrative intelligence (story-awareness, story-telling, historical grounding) in regard to an agent's transcendence of its immediate local temporal context to create a broad temporal horizon in which the experience and future of the agent can be accounted for, together with the advantage that narrative provides to sociality by making the experience of others available without the risk of having to undergo the experience for one's self. Concepts and consequences for the design of artifacts are surveyed, together with a brief description of a formal algebraic framework a#ording support for narrative grounding. What's a Story For? We address what it is about narrative that makes it worthwhile for natural and artificial agents. Interest in narrative in literature, cultural studies, psychology and the arts is of course much older than in Artificial Intelligence (AI) - in some cases ancient - and has necessarily focused primarily on human notions of ...







