Lonely PC seeks female companion (OMG)
PC as Personal Companion for Computer Studies"
Chicago Flame (10/24/05)
The National Science Foundation has awarded a three-year, $520,000 grant to support the development of a personal computer that will act like a student and assist students in solving problems. University of Illinois at Chicago associate computer science professor Barbara Di Eugenio will develop a "dialog agent" along with Pamela Jordan and Sandra Katz, research associates at the Learning Research and Development Center at the University of Pittsburgh. In addition to developing a dialog agent that can think, respond, and speak like a college student, the researchers have to design a unit that college students, including female undergraduates, would want to use. The researchers will also work with David Allbritton, a psychology professor at DePaul University. The computer has to be able to answer questions if it is to interact with students, says Di Eugenio.
Entire article:
Can a personal computer be programmed to behave like a student and work with a human classmate to solve difficult problems in computer science?
And, can this computer student "peer" find acceptance among female undergraduates, whose enrollment numbers in computer science are on the decline? !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Barbara Di Eugenio, an associate professor of computer science at the University of Illinois at Chicago, thinks so. She and her colleagues Pamela Jordan and Sandra Katz, research associates at the University of Pittsburgh's Learning Research and Development Center, will split a $520,000, three-year National Science Foundation grant to produce a program they call a "dialog agent" that will think, react and speak like a college student -- but also ultimately know answers to questions to help keep the student-computer interaction on a productive track.
Di Eugenio, Jordan and Katz will collaborate with psychology professor David Allbritton of DePaul University. The project also has the endorsement of UIC's new Learning Sciences Research Institute.
While many software programs, such as search engines, can seem amazingly intuitive, Di Eugenio said the new dialog agent she's developing will need to be even more sophisticated in the way it interacts with users.
"If the computer has to interact with students, it really has to know the answers already," she said. "But we want to set parameters so the computer acts like a student peer. The computer may know everything, but it won't say everything right away, because it wants to encourage the student to participate."
Comments
As if the male engineers and scientists weren't difficult enough to communicate with in the first place, now you may have to try to make sense of your personal companion robot for solving a complex problem...
This is nutty and funny on so many levels that I can't even begin to verbalize it.
Posted by: marientina
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October 26, 2005 2:53 PM