OTHER
Adaptive depression, affective computing, and intelligent processing
C. Webster
- Year
- 2002
- Citations
- 4
Abstract
Adaptive depression is part of the intelligent-not just human-condition. Intelligent systems need to detect patterns of failure in memory, retreat from dangerous environments, explain failures, rehearse new behaviors off-line, and return to new, quick, successful behavior, until their environment changes again. Computer models of adaptive depression are examples of affective computing, why and how to give computers not just reasoning but emotion as well, and have important implications for intelligently adaptable, autonomous robots and software agents.
Keywords
Computer scienceAdaptive behaviorAffective computingHuman–computer interactionIntelligent decision support systemDepression (economics)Intelligent agentRobotArtificial intelligencePsychology
Related papers
OTHER
📊 26,957 cites
Statistical Learning Theory
Yuhai Wu, Vladimir Vapnik
1999
PERCEPTION
📊 22,245 cites
Artificial intelligence: a modern approach
1995
OTHER
Open access📊 20,501 cites
Fractional Differential Equations
Igor Podlubný
2025
OTHER
📊 18,993 cites
Applied Nonlinear Control
Jean-Jacques Slotine, Weiping Li
1991