• Sorted by Date • Classified by Publication Type • Classified by Topic • Grouped by Student (current) • Grouped by Former Students •
Natalie Fridman and Gal A. Kaminka.
Modeling Imitational Behavior via Social Comparison Theory (Extended Abstract) . In C. Pelachaud, J. Martin, E.
Andre, G. Chollet, K. Karpouzis, and D. Pele, editors, Intelligent Virtual Agents 2007 , LNAI, pp. 377–378,
Springer-Verlag, 2007.
Modeling crowd behaviors is an important challenge for intelligentvirtual agents. We propose a general cognitive model of simulating crowd behaviors, based on Festinger's Social Comparison Theory (SCT), a prominent social psychology theory. Wepresent the use of the SCT model (using the Soar cognitive architecture) in thegeneration of imitational behavior in loosely-coupled groups and show that SCT generatesbehavior more in-tune with human crowd behavior.
@InCollection{iva07,
author = {Natalie Fridman and Gal A. Kaminka},
title = {Modeling Imitational Behavior via Social Comparison Theory (Extended Abstract) },
booktitle = {Intelligent Virtual Agents 2007 },
pages = {377--378},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag},
year = {2007},
abstract = {Modeling crowd behaviors is an important challenge for intelligent
virtual agents. We propose a general cognitive model of simulating crowd behaviors, based on Festinger's Social Comparison Theory (SCT), a prominent social psychology theory. We
present the use of the SCT model (using the Soar cognitive architecture) in the
generation of imitational behavior in loosely-coupled groups and show that SCT generates
behavior more in-tune with human crowd behavior. },
wwwnote = {},
editor = {C. Pelachaud and J. Martin and E. Andre and G. Chollet and K. Karpouzis and D. Pele},
volume = {4722},
series = {{LNAI}},
}
Generated by bib2html.pl (written by Patrick Riley ) on Mon Feb 03, 2025 16:33:37