Title: Caring Computers
1Caring Computers Emotional Engines
- To what extent can technology have emotions,
express emotions and elicit emotions? - Stephen Appleton Becky Wright
2Aims
- Is it possible to create emotions in artificial
systems? - What might it mean for a computer to possess
emotions? - What are the potential problems, limitations?
- Can computers express emotions?
- Can people perceive technology as capable of
feelings?
3Media Perception
- Suggests emotion is possible in artificial
lifeforms - Can have both negative and positive results
- e.g. HAL 9000 from 2001 A Space Odyssey
- Child android from AI
- Data from Star Trek
- Computers rational, logical
- Emotions illogical
- Emotions are what separates humans from
machines!
4Biological
Definition
- Neurological underpinning
- Neurotransmitters e.g. dopamine, endorphines
- Hormones e.g. cortisol, adrenaline
- Also
- Physiological states e.g. fear response
AI Focus (Boden, 1996)
Cognitive
- Functionalist viewpoint mental operations of
emotions - (Boden, 1996)
Conscious
- Awareness of emotions
- Feelings, qualia
- Breadth variety of affective experiences
(Rolls, 2005)
5Function of emotions Evolutionary context
(Sloman, 1990 Cañamero, 2002)
Physical limits
Autonomous
Organism
- Cognitive limits
- attention
- memory
- info-processing
Multiple goals
ENVIRONMENT
Relevant data?
Complex
Unpredictable
6Function of emotions continued
- An emotion is usually caused by a person
consciously or unconsciously evaluating an event
as relevant to a concern (a goal) that is
important the emotion is felt as positive when a
concern is advanced and negative when a concern
is impeded. - (Oatley Jenkins, 1996, p.96)
- What emotions are about is action (or motivation
for action) and action control - (Frijda, 1995, p.506)
- Emotions as cognitive appraisers
- Alerts us to goal relevant events/stimuli
- Does this in parallel for all concerns
(Frijda, 1995) - Emotions as somatic markers
- Gut feelings
- Facilitate decision-making process
(Damasio, 1994)
7Goals Beliefs
- Humans
- 4 Fs
- (Feed, Flight, Fight, Reproduction)
- Natural Selection
- No purpose, intent behind design
- Blind Watchmaker (Dawkins, 1986)
- Machines
- Task oriented goals
- Human programmer
- Specific purpose, intent
- (Rolls, 2005)
- Chinese Room problem
If a computer has no goals or concerns of its
own, can it really be said to possess emotions
about such things? (Sloman, 1990)
8Computers qualia
- Must a computer be aware of its own emotive
intentions feelings? - Some primary emotions can occur prior to
conscious awareness (Picard, 1997) - Animal, infant emotions lack of
awareness/intent (Sloman Croucher, 1981) - Clinical examples (e.g. repressors)
(Derakshnan Eysenck,
1999) - Consciousness is a prerequisite only to the
emotional experience and not to the generation of
the emotion. - (Picard, 1997,
p.74) - We, all of us overanthropomorphize humans, who
are after all mere machines - (Brooks, 2005, cited Blackmore, 2003, p.215)
- General Problem Solvers (Newell Simon,
1958, cited Weizenbaum, 1976)
9Physiological components of emotions
- Does a lack of biological simulation prevent the
development of artificial emotions? - COG synthetic hormones (Brooks, 2005)
- James-Lang theory of emotions (James, 1884
Lang, 1885)
Emotion
- But.
- Paraplegics
- Cold emotions (Sloman, 1990)
10ELIZA the Psychotherapist
- Girl My boyfriend made me come here.
- ELIZA Your boyfriend made you come here
- Girl He says Im depressed much of the time.
- ELIZA I am sorry to hear you are depressed
- Girl Its true. I am unhappy.
- ELIZA Do you think coming here will help you not
to be unhappy - Girl I need some help, that much seems
certain. - ELIZA What would it mean to you if you got some
help - Girl Perhaps I could learn to get along
with my mother. - ELIZA Tell me more about your family
- (Weizenbaum, 1976, p.3-4)
11- Emotional impact of ELIZA
- I can imagine the development of a network of
computer psychotherapeutic terminals, something
like arrays of large telephone booths, in which,
for a few dollars a session, we would be able to
talk with an attentive, tested, and largely
nondirective psychotherapist. - (Dr. C. Sagan, 1975, cited Weizenbaum, p. 5)
-
12The Media Equation
- Human tendency to treat computers as if they are
real life, social beings. (Reeves Nass,
2002) - Natural, often subconscious
- Evolutionary backdrop
- Emergent emotions (Picard, 1997)
- Human examples e.g. actors, service staff
- Even no communication is a type of
communication! (Bartneck et al., 2004) - Blank face analogy
- Ontrack Data-Recovery survey
- User responses
- - Sweet-talk computer
- Physical abuse of computer
- (Sullivan, 2005)
13Natural emotions
- Baldi, computer-generated head. Facial
expressions as easy to label as human
equivalents. (Massaro et al., 2000) - Synthetic speech recognition of emotional
content. - (Cahn, 1990, cited Brave et al., 2005)
However, can take natural look too far.
(Hara, 2000, cited Menzel DAluisio, 2000)
- The Uncanny Valley (Mori, 1970s)
- To be convincing an agents embodiment needs to
match its skills (Bartneck, 2001) - Disturbing if fails to meet expectations
(Picard Klein, 2002)
14Kismet
- Anthropomophic robotic head, specialised for
face-to-face interaction - Infant-like emotional behaviour
- Endowed with basic emotive system
- Goals interact with humans play with
toys rest - Emotional expressions
- Speech babble, emotive intent displayed
through prosody - Empathy skills
15Conclusion
- Q. Can computers be programmed with an emotive
function? - A. Depends on your definition of emotions
- Emotions are a program within a human robot
(e.g. Brooks Newell Simon), therefore just a
matter of adding program to artificial robots. - Emotions occur at more than just an operational
level- they are a conscious experience, not a
simulated behaviour. Computers can never have
emotions as they can never be conscious.
Are computer emotions real or as if
simulations?...
16References
- Arbib, M.A. Fellous, J. (2004) Emotions From
Brain to Robot Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 8
(12), p.554-561 - Bartneck, C. (2001) How Convincing is Mr. Datas
Smile Affective Expressions of Machines User
Modeling and User-Adapted Interaction 11,
p.279-295 - Bartneck, C., Reichenbach, J. Breeman, A.V.
(2004) In Your Face, Robot! The Influence of a
Characters Embodiment on How Users Perceive Its
Emotional Expressions, web page
http//www.bartneck.de/work/bartneckDE2004.pdf - Blackmore, S. Consciousness, An Introduction
(2003), Hodder Stoughton, London - Boden, M.A. (ed) The Philosophy of Artificial
Life (1996), Oxford University Press, Oxford - Brave, S., Nass, C. Hutchinson, K. (2005)
Computers That Care Investigating The Effects
of Orientation of Emotion Exhibited By An
Embodied Computer Agent Int. J. Human-Computer
Studies, 62, p. 161-178 - Breazeal, C. (2003) Emotion and Sociable
Humanoid Robots Int. J. Human-Computer Studies,
59, p.119-155 - Brooks, R. (2005) COG, web page
http//groups.csail.mit.edu/lbr/humanoid-robotics-
group/cog/ - Cañamero, L.D. (2002) Designing Emotions for
Activity Selection in Autonomous Agents from
Emotions In Humans and Artifacts Trappl,l R.
Petta, P. Payr, Sabine. (eds), MIT Press,
Cambridge, US, p.115-148 - Damasio, A. R. (2004) William James and The
Modern Neurobiology of Emotion from Emotion,
Evolution, and Rationality Evans, D. Pierre,
C. (eds), Oxford University Press, Oxford, p.3-14 - Damasio, A.R. Descartes Error Emotion, Reason
and The Human Brain (1994), Putnam, New York - Dawkins, R. The Blind Watchmaker (2000),
Penguin, London - Derakshan, N., Eysenck, M. W. (1999) Are
repressors self-deceivers or other- deceivers?
Cognition Emotion, 13, 1-17 - Frijda, N.H. (1995) Emotions in Robots from
Comparative Approaches to Cognitive Science
Rotiblat, H.L. Meyer, J (eds), MIT Press,
Cambridge, US
17References
- Martínez-Miranda, J. Aldea, A. (2005) Emotions
in Human and Artificial Intelligence Computers
in Human Behavior, 21, p.323-341 - Menzel, P. DAluisio, F. Robo Sapiens
Evolution of a New Species (2000), MIT Press,
Cambridge, US - Mori, M. (1970s), web page http//www.everything2
.com/index.pl?node_id1687559 - Oatley, K Jenkins, J.M. Understanding
Emotions (1996), Blackwell Press, Oxford - Picard, R.W. Affective Computing (1997), MIT
Press, Cambridge, US - Picard, R.W. Klein, J. (2002) Computers That
Recognise and Respond to User Emotion
Theoretical and Practical Implications
Interacting With Computers, 14, p.141-169 - Pinker, S. How The Mind Works (1997) Penguin,
London - Reeves, B. Nass, C. The Media Equation (2002)
CSLI Publications, Stanford, US - Rolls, E.T. Emotion Explained (2005), Oxford
University Press, UK - Sloman, A. (1990) Motives, Mechanisms and
Emotions from The Philosophy of Artificial
Intelligence Boden, M.A. (ed), Oxford University
Press, Oxford p.231-247 - Sloman, A. Croucher, M. (1981) You Dont Need
A Soft Skin To Have A Warm Heart Towards A
Computational Analysis of Motives and Emotions,
web page http//www.cs.bham.ac.uk/research/cogaff
/sloman-croucher-warm-heart.pdf - Stern, A. (2002) Creating Emotional
Relationships with Virtual Characters from
Emotions In Humans and Artifacts Trappl,l R.
Petta, P. Payr, Sabine. (eds), MIT Press,
Cambridge, US, p.333-362 - Sullivan, B. (2005) Drop The Mouse and Step Away
From The PC, web page http//www.msnbc.msn.com/i
d/7329279 - Weizenbaum, J. Computer Power and Human Reason
From Judgment to Calculation (1976), W.H.
Freedman and Company, New York
18Discussion Questions
- Is Kismets basic emotional system an example of
real emotions or as if emotions? Could Kismet
be said to have a partial subset of emotions or
is it just a simulation model? - If a machine can ever be said to have its own
emotions, it arguably needs to be able to develop
its own goals beliefs. Would we be able to
recognise empathise with a computers own
drives emotions or would we end up displaying
of some form of artificial autism? - Although the media equation is powerful it is not
infallible- people can override their natural
empathic tendencies, as demonstrated by Bartneck
in his robot replication of Milgrams
electric-shock experiment. If machines were ever
capable of emotions, should this change how we
treat them?