MaTIC: a Mathematical Theory of Inferential Communication

11/11/2021
by   Joan Llobera, et al.
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The arrival of Immersive Virtual and Augmented Reality hardware to the consumer market suggests seamless multi-modal communication between human participants and autonomous interactive characters is an achievable goal in the near future. This possibility is further reinforced by the rapid improvements in the automated analysis of speech, facial expressions and body language, as well as improvements in character animation and speech synthesis techniques. However, we do not have a formal theory that allows us to compare, on one side, interactive social scenarios among human users and autonomous virtual characters and, on the other side, pragmatic inference mechanisms as they occur in non-mediated communication. Grices' and Sperbers' model of inferential communication does explain the nature of everyday communication through cognitive mechanisms that support spontaneous inferences performed in pragmatic communication. However, such a theory is not based on a mathematical framework with a precision comparable to classical information theory. To address this gap, in this article we introduce a Mathematical Theory of Inferential Communication (MaTIC). MaTIC formalises some assumptions of inferential communication, it explores its theoretical consequences and outlines the practical steps needed to use it in different application scenarios.

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