Imperial College London > Talks@ee.imperial > Featured talks > Xapagy: A cognitive architecture for narrative reasoning
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Xapagy: A cognitive architecture for narrative reasoningAdd to your list(s) Download to your calendar using vCal
If you have a question about this talk, please contact Faye B Gosling. The Xapagy cognitive architecture has been designed with the explicit goal to model and mimic the activities performed by humans when witnessing, reading, recalling, narrating and talking about stories. In contrast to other systems which treat the textual form of a narrative as a standalone, first class object, Xapagy is an agent oriented system: a narrative is always seen through the experience of an individual agent, and the mode in which the narrative is delivered to the agent (for instance, the pace of story-telling or rhetorical breaks) changes the way in which the agent “understands” the story. We will describe the architecture of the system, and will demonstrate some of the features through the modeling of the story of Little Red Riding Hood in the Xapi language of the system. Refreshments at 18:00. This talk is part of the Featured talks series. This talk is included in these lists:
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