Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents

Embodied conversational agents put a “human” touch on intelligent tutoring systems by using conversation to support learning. When considering instruction in interpersonal domains, such as intercultural negotiation, the development of an interpersonal relationship with one’s pedagogical agent may pl...

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Main Author: Ogan, Amy
Format: Others
Published: Research Showcase @ CMU 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/60
http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1063&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-cmu.edu-oai-repository.cmu.edu-dissertations-10632015-05-12T03:32:13Z Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents Ogan, Amy Embodied conversational agents put a “human” touch on intelligent tutoring systems by using conversation to support learning. When considering instruction in interpersonal domains, such as intercultural negotiation, the development of an interpersonal relationship with one’s pedagogical agent may play a significant role in learning. However, there is conflicting evidence in the literature both regarding the ability of agents to cultivate social relationships with humans, and their effect on learning. In this dissertation, I present a model of social dialog designed to affect learners’ interpersonal relations with virtual agents, a development process for creating social dialog, and empirical studies showing that this dialog has significant effects on learners’ perceptions of the agents and negotiation performance. In early work, I explicitly prompted learners to have social goals for the interaction. I found that while students who reported social goals for interacting with the agents had significantly higher learning gains, explicit prompting was not effective at inducing these goals. I thus focused on implicit influence of learner goals, developing a model of social instructional dialog (SID) that integrates conversational strategies that are theorized to produce interpersonal effects on relationships. In two subsequent studies, an agent with the SID model engendered greater feelings of entitativity, shared perspective, and trust, suggesting that the model improved learner social relationships with the agent. Importantly, these effects transferred to other agents encountered later in the environment. The social dialog condition also made fewer errors and achieved more negotiation objectives in a subsequent negotiation than a control group, evidence that the improved social relationship lead to better negotiation performance. These findings regarding interpersonal relationships with agents contribute to the literature on learner-agent interactions, and can guide the future development of agents in social environments. 2011-02-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/60 http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1063&context=dissertations Dissertations Research Showcase @ CMU Virtual agents pedagogical agents social relationships social dialog dialog modeling serious games simulation-based learning educational technology intercultural competence interpersonal skills training human-computer interaction
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Virtual agents
pedagogical agents
social relationships
social dialog
dialog modeling
serious games
simulation-based learning
educational technology
intercultural competence
interpersonal skills training
human-computer interaction
spellingShingle Virtual agents
pedagogical agents
social relationships
social dialog
dialog modeling
serious games
simulation-based learning
educational technology
intercultural competence
interpersonal skills training
human-computer interaction
Ogan, Amy
Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
description Embodied conversational agents put a “human” touch on intelligent tutoring systems by using conversation to support learning. When considering instruction in interpersonal domains, such as intercultural negotiation, the development of an interpersonal relationship with one’s pedagogical agent may play a significant role in learning. However, there is conflicting evidence in the literature both regarding the ability of agents to cultivate social relationships with humans, and their effect on learning. In this dissertation, I present a model of social dialog designed to affect learners’ interpersonal relations with virtual agents, a development process for creating social dialog, and empirical studies showing that this dialog has significant effects on learners’ perceptions of the agents and negotiation performance. In early work, I explicitly prompted learners to have social goals for the interaction. I found that while students who reported social goals for interacting with the agents had significantly higher learning gains, explicit prompting was not effective at inducing these goals. I thus focused on implicit influence of learner goals, developing a model of social instructional dialog (SID) that integrates conversational strategies that are theorized to produce interpersonal effects on relationships. In two subsequent studies, an agent with the SID model engendered greater feelings of entitativity, shared perspective, and trust, suggesting that the model improved learner social relationships with the agent. Importantly, these effects transferred to other agents encountered later in the environment. The social dialog condition also made fewer errors and achieved more negotiation objectives in a subsequent negotiation than a control group, evidence that the improved social relationship lead to better negotiation performance. These findings regarding interpersonal relationships with agents contribute to the literature on learner-agent interactions, and can guide the future development of agents in social environments.
author Ogan, Amy
author_facet Ogan, Amy
author_sort Ogan, Amy
title Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
title_short Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
title_full Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
title_fullStr Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
title_full_unstemmed Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
title_sort supporting learner social relationships with enculturated pedagogal agents
publisher Research Showcase @ CMU
publishDate 2011
url http://repository.cmu.edu/dissertations/60
http://repository.cmu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1063&context=dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT oganamy supportinglearnersocialrelationshipswithenculturatedpedagogalagents
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