Integration of Planning with Recognition for Responsive Interaction Using Classical Planners

Authors

  • Richard Freedman University of Massachusetts Amherst
  • Shlomo Zilberstein University of Massachusetts Amherst

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v31i1.11188

Keywords:

Planning, Plan Recognition, Goal Recognition, Interaction

Abstract

Interaction between multiple agents requires some form of coordination and a level of mutual awareness. When computers and robots interact with people, they need to recognize human plans and react appropriately. Plan and goal recognition techniques have focused on identifying an agent's task given a sufficiently long action sequence. However, by the time the plan and/or goal are recognized, it may be too late for computing an interactive response. We propose an integration of planning with probabilistic recognition where each method uses intermediate results from the other as a guiding heuristic for recognition of the plan/goal in-progress as well as the interactive response. We show that, like the used recognition method, these interaction problems can be compiled into classical planning problems and solved using off-the-shelf methods. In addition to the methodology, this paper introduces problem categories for different forms of interaction, an evaluation metric for the benefits from the interaction, and extensions to the recognition algorithm that make its intermediate results more practical while the plan is in progress.

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Published

2017-02-12

How to Cite

Freedman, R., & Zilberstein, S. (2017). Integration of Planning with Recognition for Responsive Interaction Using Classical Planners. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 31(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v31i1.11188