Abstract
The inevitability of conflicts in group interactions and their role as promoters of cognitive changes as well as of reflection and articulation has generated a significant amount of research on the subject. In this light, we have built a computational framework for the detection and mediation of metacognitive conflicts, aiming at fostering more productive interactions. When mediating a conflict situation, we diagnose which strategic change is happening, and suggest courses of action that can lead to more refined solutions. In order to make mediation more effective, we have also considered group and individual models, the history of the interaction and model of the task. Our approach is exemplified by the implementation of MArCo.
Sponsored by CAPES-Brazil.
Preview
Unable to display preview. Download preview PDF.
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Putnam, L.L,: Conflict in Group Decision-Making. In: Hirokawa, R.Y. and Poole, M.S. (eds.): Communication and Group Decision-Making. Sage Publications (1986) 175–196
Easterbrook, S.M., Beck, E.E., Goodlet, J.S., Plowman, L., Sharples, M. and Wood, C.C.: A Survey of Empirical Studies of Conflict. In Easterbrook, S. (ed.): CSCW: Cooperation or Conflict?, Computer-Supported Cooperative Work series, Diaper, D. and Sanger, C. (eds.) Springer-Verlag (1993) 1–68
Robbins, S.P.: Organizational Behaviour: Concepts, Controversies and Applications, London, Prentice-Hall (1996)
Joiner, R.: The Negotiation of Dialogue Focus: An Investigation of Dialogue Processes in Joint Planning in a Computer Based Task. In: Claire O’Malley (ed.): Computer Supported Collaborative Learning. Nato ASI Series (1995) 203–222
Doise, W., and Mugny, G.: The Social Development of the Intellect. International Series in Experimental Social Psychology, vol. 10, Pergamon Press (1984)
Galliers, J.R.: A Theoretical Framework for Computer Models of Cooperative Dialogue, Acknowledging Multi-Agent Conflict, PhD Thesis, Open University (1989)
Parsons, S.D., Sierra, C.A., Jennings, N.R.: Agents that reason and negotiate by arguing. In Journal of Logic and Computation, vol. 8 (3) (1998) 261–292
Tedesco, P. and Self, J.A: Towards a computational model of meta-cognitive conflicts: a preliminary investigation. Technical Report 98/28, Computer Based Learning Unit, University of Leeds (1998)
Jennings, N.R.: Controlling Cooperative problem Solving in Industrial Multi-Agent Systems Using Joint Intentions. In Artificial Intelligence 75 (1995) 195–240
Grosz, B.J., and Kraus, S.: Collaborative Plans for Complex Group Action. In Artificial Intelligence 86 (1996) 269–357
Grosz, B.J., and Kraus, S.: The Evolution of Shared Plans. in Foundations and Theories of Rational Agency, Rao, A. and Wooldridge, M. (eds.). Kluwer Academic Publishers (1999) 227–262
Gärdenfors, P.: Knowledge in Flux. MIT Press (1988)
Bochman, A.: A Foundational Theory of Belief and Belief Change, in Artificial Intelligence, 108 (1999) 309–352
Giordano, L., Gliozzi, V. and Olivetti, N.: A Conditional Logic for Belief Revision. in Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence: Proceedings of the European Workshop JELIA’98, Dagstuhe, Germany (1998)
Goodman, B., Soller, A., Linton, F., Gaimari, R.: Encouraging Student Reflection and Articulation using a Learning Companion. In International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education vol. 8 (1998)237–255
Tedesco,_P.A, and Self. J.A.: Using Meta-Cognitive Conflicts to Support Group Problem Solving. in Proceedings of the 5th ITS’2000, Gauthier, G., Frasson, C., and VanLehn, K. (eds.), Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 1839. Springer Verlag (2000) 232–241
Cohen, P. R., and Levesque, H.J., Intention is Choice with Commitment. in Artificial Intelligence 42 (1990) 213–261
Pilkington, R. M.: Dialogue games in support of qualitative reasoning. In Journal of Computer Assisted Learning: Special Issue on Qualitative Reasoning, 14 (1998) 308–320
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2000 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
About this paper
Cite this paper
Azevedo Tedesco, P., Self, J. (2000). MArCo: Using Meta-cognitive Conflicts to Provoke Strategic Changes. In: Monard, M.C., Sichman, J.S. (eds) Advances in Artificial Intelligence. IBERAMIA SBIA 2000 2000. Lecture Notes in Computer Science(), vol 1952. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44399-1_20
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-44399-1_20
Publisher Name: Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg
Print ISBN: 978-3-540-41276-2
Online ISBN: 978-3-540-44399-5
eBook Packages: Springer Book Archive