Posts Tagged ‘games’
30
Sep
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI. Tagged: case-based reasoning, games, interactive drama, planning. Leave a Comment
Interactive narrative systems attempt to tell stories to players capable of changing the direction and/or outcome of the story. Despite the growing importance of multiplayer social experiences in games, little research has focused on multiplayer interactive narrative experiences. We performed a preliminary study to determine how human directors design and execute multiplayer interactive story experiences [...]
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19
Aug
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Agents, Game AI, Learning. Tagged: case-based reasoning, creativity, games, interactive drama, meta-reasoning, problem solving, virtual worlds. Leave a Comment
Computer games are an increasingly popular application for Artificial Intelligence (AI) research, and conversely AI is an increasingly popular selling point for commercial digital games. AI for non playing characters (NPC) in computer games tends to come from people with computing skills well beyond the average user. The prime reason behind the lack of involvement [...]
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17
May
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI. Tagged: case-based reasoning, games, interactive drama. Leave a Comment
We apply case based reasoning techniques to build an intelligent authoring tool that can assist nontechnical users with authoring their own digital movies. In this paper, we focus on generating dialogue lines between two characters in a movie story. We use Darmok2, a case based planner, extended with a hierarchical plan adaptation module to generate [...]
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25
Feb
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI, Learning. Tagged: case-based reasoning, games, real-time cbr, rts games. 1 Comment
Creating AI for complex computer games requires a great deal of technical knowledge as well as engineering effort on the part of game developers. This paper focuses on techniques that enable end-users to create AI for games without requiring technical knowledge by using case-based reasoning techniques. AI creation for computer games typically involves two steps: [...]
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20
Jul
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI. Tagged: case-based reasoning, games, real-time cbr, rts games. Leave a Comment
Computer games are excellent domains for research and evaluation of AI and CBR techniques. The main drawback is the effort needed to connect AI systems to existing games. This paper presents MMPM, a middleware platform that supports easy connection of AI techniques with games. We will describe the MMPM architecture, and compare with related systems [...]
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19
Jul
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Agents, Game AI, Learning, Talks, Web / Web 2.0. Tagged: believable agents, case-based reasoning, games, goal-driven learning, interactive drama, meta-reasoning, problem solving, real-time cbr, rts games, virtual worlds. 1 Comment
(Click image to view the video – it’s near the bottom of the new page.) User-generated content is everywhere: photos, videos, news, blogs, art, music, and every other type of digital media on the Social Web. Games are no exception. From strategy games to immersive virtual worlds, game players are increasingly engaged in creating and sharing [...]
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10
Jul
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Agents, Game AI, Learning. Tagged: believable agents, case-based reasoning, games, goal-driven learning, meta-reasoning, real-time cbr, rts games. Leave a Comment
AI agents designed for real-time settings need to adapt themselves to changing circumstances to improve their performance and remedy their faults. Agents typically designed for computer games, however, lack this ability. The lack of adaptivity causes a break in player experience when they repeatedly fail to behave properly in circumstances unforeseen by the game designers. [...]
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28
Sep
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Agents, Game AI, Learning, Talks, Web / Web 2.0. Tagged: believable agents, case-based reasoning, games, interactive drama, meta-reasoning, multistrategy learning, planning, problem solving, real-time cbr, rts games, virtual worlds. 3 Comments
User-generated content is everywhere: photos, videos, news, blogs, art, music, and every other type of digital media on the Social Web. Games are no exception. From strategy games to immersive virtual worlds, game players are increasingly engaged in creating and sharing nearly all aspects of the gaming experience: maps, quests, artifacts, avatars, clothing, even games [...]
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19
Sep
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI. Tagged: believable agents, case-based reasoning, games, interactive drama, problem solving. 2 Comments
A growing research community is working towards employing drama management components in story-based games. These components gently guide the story towards a narrative arc that improves the player’s gaming experience. In this paper we evaluate a novel drama management approach deployed in an interactive fiction game called Anchorhead. This approach uses player’s feedback as the [...]
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9
Sep
Posted by cognitivecomputing in Game AI, Learning. Tagged: believable agents, games, goal-driven learning, meta-reasoning, planning, real-time cbr, virtual worlds. Leave a Comment
Intelligent agents working in real-time domains need to adapt to changing circumstance so that they can improve their performance and avoid their mistakes. AI agents designed for interactive games, however, typically lack this ability. Game agents are traditionally implemented using static, hand-authored behaviors or scripts that are brittle to changing world dynamics and cause a [...]
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