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BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:/NewsandEvents/Archives/2014/newsitem/5798/4-5
 -August-2014-Second-workshop-on-Reasoning-about-ot
 her-minds-Logical-and-cognitive-perspectives-Groni
 ngen-The-Netherlands
DTSTAMP:20140612T000000
SUMMARY:Second workshop on Reasoning about other m
 inds: Logical and cognitive perspectives, Groninge
 n, The Netherlands
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20140804
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20140805
LOCATION:Groningen, The Netherlands
DESCRIPTION:This workshop aims to shed light on mo
 dels of social reasoning that take into account re
 alistic resource bounds. People reason about other
  people's mental states in order to understand and
  predict the others' behavior. This capability to 
 reason about others' knowledge, beliefs and intent
 ions is often referred to as 'theory of mind'. Ide
 alized rational agents are capable of recursion in
  their social reasoning, and can reason about phen
 omena like common knowledge. Such idealized social
  reasoning has been modeled by modal logics such a
 s epistemic logic and BDI (belief, goal, intention
 ) logics. However, in real-world situations, many 
 people seem to lose track of such recursive social
  reasoning after only a few levels. Cognitive scie
 ntists build computational models of social reason
 ing, for example, recently an "inverse planning" m
 odel based on Bayesian inference frameworks has pr
 oven successful in modeling human inferences about
  the goals and beliefs underlying other people's o
 bserved behavior.  For more information, see http:
 //www.ai.rug.nl/conf/reasoningminds2/.  Please sen
 d your extended abstract in PDF format, not exceed
 ing 4 double-spaced pages (1,500 words) by Tuesday
  July 1, 2014.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<div>\n        <p>Thi
 s workshop aims to shed light on models of social 
 reasoning that take into account realistic resourc
 e bounds. People reason about other people's menta
 l states in order to understand and predict the ot
 hers' behavior. This capability to reason about ot
 hers' knowledge, beliefs and intentions is often r
 eferred to as 'theory of mind'. Idealized rational
  agents are capable of recursion in their social r
 easoning, and can reason about phenomena like comm
 on knowledge. Such idealized social reasoning has 
 been modeled by modal logics such as epistemic log
 ic and BDI (belief, goal, intention) logics. Howev
 er, in real-world situations, many people seem to 
 lose track of such recursive social reasoning afte
 r only a few levels. Cognitive scientists build co
 mputational models of social reasoning, for exampl
 e, recently an &quot;inverse planning&quot; model 
 based on Bayesian inference frameworks has proven 
 successful in modeling human inferences about the 
 goals and beliefs underlying other people's observ
 ed behavior.</p>\n    \n      \n        <p>For mor
 e information, see <a target="_blank" href="http:/
 /www.ai.rug.nl/conf/reasoningminds2/">http://www.a
 i.rug.nl/conf/reasoningminds2/</a>.</p>\n    </div
 ><div>\n        <p>Please send your extended abstr
 act in PDF format, not exceeding 4 double-spaced p
 ages (1,500 words) by Tuesday July 1, 2014. \n    
     </p>\n      </div>
URL:/NewsandEvents/Archives/2014/newsitem/5798/4-5
 -August-2014-Second-workshop-on-Reasoning-about-ot
 her-minds-Logical-and-cognitive-perspectives-Groni
 ngen-The-Netherlands
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