Agents learn through receiving feedback on their performance. In some Maes programs, agents evolve … Maes believes that user trust is built up most quickly when agents can communicate the basis for their decisions … In the case of mail-sort agents, Maes says that users “gradually build up a trust relationship with agents,” much as one would with a new human personal assistant. Maes’s agents may be given a human face.
Predictor: Maes, Pattie
Prediction, in context:In her 1995 book “Life on the Screen,” Sherry Turkle – an accomplished social psychologist, sociologist and anthropologist from MIT whose studies centered around people and computers for decades – talks about the AI research by Pattie Maes. Turkle writes:”Maes thinks of [her AI creations] as organisms made up of computer code … Maes’s cyberspace robots, known as agents, construct their identities on the Internet … In a project to build agents that can sort electronic mail, an agent keeps track of what mail one throws out … what mail one looks at first … and what mail one refiles for future reference … After a training period during which the agent ‘looks over the user’s shoulder,’ it comes to demonstrate a reasonable degree of competence. Maes’s agents learn through receiving feedback on their performance. In some Maes programs, agents evolve … Maes believes that user trust is built up most quickly when agents can communicate the basis for their decisions … In the case of mail-sort agents, Maes says that users ‘gradually build up a trust relationship with agents,’ much as one would with a new human personal assistant. Maes’s agents may be given a human face. Simple cartoon characters represent the agent and communicate its state of mind. The user can watch the agent ‘thinking,’ ‘working,’ ‘making a suggestion,’ or ‘admitting’ that it doesn’t have enough information. The user can set a personal threshold of certainty that the agent requires before making a suggestion.”
Biography:Pattie Maes , a researcher at MIT’s Media Lab, was a founder and board member of Firefly Network, Inc. in Cambridge, Mass. one of the first companies to commercialize personalization and profiling technology (Firefly was acquired by Microsoft in 1998). She was also a founder and a board member of Open Ratings, Inc., a provider of performance data on businesses for B2B ecommerce. (Research Scientist/Illuminator.)
Date of prediction: January 1, 1995
Topic of prediction: Getting, Sharing Information
Subtopic: Intelligent Agents/AI
Name of publication: Life on the Screen (book)
Title, headline, chapter name: Chapter 3: Making a Pass at a Robot
Quote Type: Paraphrase
Page number or URL of document at time of study:
Pages 98-100
This data was logged into the Elon/Pew Predictions Database by: Anderson, Janna Quitney
