A robot's sense-making of fallacies and rhetorical tropes. Creating ontologies of what humans try to say

Johan F. Hoorn, Denice J. Tuinhof

Research output: Journal article publicationJournal articleAcademic researchpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

In the design of user-friendly robots, human communication should be understood by the system beyond mere logics and literal meaning. Robot communication-design has long ignored the importance of communication and politeness rules that are ‘forgiving’ and ‘suspending disbelief’ and cannot handle the basically metaphorical way humans design their utterances. Through analysis of the psychological causes of illogical and non-literal statements, signal detection, fundamental attribution errors, and anthropomorphism, we developed a fail-safe protocol for fallacies and tropes that makes use of Frege's distinction between reference and sense, Beth's tableau analytics, Grice's maxim of quality, and epistemic considerations to have the robot politely make sense of a user's sometimes unintelligible demands.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)116-130
Number of pages15
JournalCognitive Systems Research
Volume72
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2022

Keywords

  • Epistemics of the virtual
  • Logical fallacies
  • Maxim of quality
  • Metaphors
  • Reference
  • Sense
  • Social robots
  • Tableau reasoning

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Artificial Intelligence

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