Goal Reasoning and Trusted Autonomy. Johnson, B., Floyd, M. W., Coman, A., Wilson, M. A., & Aha, D. W. In Abbass, H. A., Scholz, J., & Reid, D. J., editors, Foundations of Trusted Autonomy, of Studies in Systems, Decision and Control, pages 47–66. Springer International Publishing, Cham, 2018.
Goal Reasoning and Trusted Autonomy [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
This chapter discusses the topic of Goal Reasoning and its relation to Trusted Autonomy. Goal Reasoning studies how autonomous agents can extend their reasoning capabilities beyond their plans and actions, to consider their goals. Such capability allows a Goal Reasoning system to more intelligently react to unexpected events or changes in the environment. We present two models of Goal Reasoning: Goal-Driven Autonomy (GDA) and goal refinement. We then discuss several research topics related to each, and how they relate to the topic of Trusted Autonomy. Finally, we discuss several directions of ongoing work that are particularly interesting in the context of the chapter: using a model of inverse trust as a basis for adaptive autonomy, and studying how Goal Reasoning agents may choose to rebel (i.e., act contrary to a given command).
@incollection{johnson_goal_2018,
	address = {Cham},
	series = {Studies in {Systems}, {Decision} and {Control}},
	title = {Goal {Reasoning} and {Trusted} {Autonomy}},
	isbn = {978-3-319-64816-3},
	url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64816-3_3},
	abstract = {This chapter discusses the topic of Goal Reasoning and its relation to Trusted Autonomy. Goal Reasoning studies how autonomous agents can extend their reasoning capabilities beyond their plans and actions, to consider their goals. Such capability allows a Goal Reasoning system to more intelligently react to unexpected events or changes in the environment. We present two models of Goal Reasoning: Goal-Driven Autonomy (GDA) and goal refinement. We then discuss several research topics related to each, and how they relate to the topic of Trusted Autonomy. Finally, we discuss several directions of ongoing work that are particularly interesting in the context of the chapter: using a model of inverse trust as a basis for adaptive autonomy, and studying how Goal Reasoning agents may choose to rebel (i.e., act contrary to a given command).},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2019-01-16},
	booktitle = {Foundations of {Trusted} {Autonomy}},
	publisher = {Springer International Publishing},
	author = {Johnson, Benjamin and Floyd, Michael W. and Coman, Alexandra and Wilson, Mark A. and Aha, David W.},
	editor = {Abbass, Hussein A. and Scholz, Jason and Reid, Darryn J.},
	year = {2018},
	doi = {10.1007/978-3-319-64816-3_3},
	pages = {47--66}
}

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