Software bots have attracted increasing interest and popularity
in both research and society. Their contributions span automation,
digital twins, game characters with conscious-like behavior, and social
media. However, there is still a lack of intelligent bots that can adapt
to the variability and dynamic nature of digital web environments. Unlike
human users, they have difficulty understanding and exploiting the
affordances across multiple virtual environments.
Despite the hype, bots with human user-like cognition do not currently
exist. Chatbots, for instance, lack situational awareness on the digital
platforms where they operate, preventing them from enacting meaningful
and autonomous intelligent behavior similar to human users.
In this survey, we aim to explore the role of cognitive architectures in
supporting efforts towards engineering software bots with advanced general
intelligence. We discuss how cognitive architectures can contribute
to creating intelligent software bots. Furthermore, we highlight key architectural
recommendations for the future development of autonomous,
user-like cognitive bots.
«Software bots have attracted increasing interest and popularity
in both research and society. Their contributions span automation,
digital twins, game characters with conscious-like behavior, and social
media. However, there is still a lack of intelligent bots that can adapt
to the variability and dynamic nature of digital web environments. Unlike
human users, they have difficulty understanding and exploiting the
affordances across multiple virtual environments.
Despite the hype, b...
»