The basic agent's behavior can be divided into the behaviors of its two
subsections, natural language and planning. The natural language behavior
involves the interpretation and generation of sentences for interaction
with human supervisors. The extent of its
understanding and creative capabilities is bounded by the vocabulary and
grammar rules of its lexipedia. The planner can chain actions together to meet goals, as well
as backtrack to solve impasses.
This behavior is highly predictable, but the episodic memory can introduce great
variety. The agent's compiled experiences are used in by the planner as
references. Initially the agent's history is short and the planner relies
heavily on the contents of generic
memory. However, as the agent's life continues, its experiences form a
larger portion of its overall knowledge, and usually provide more specific
and relevant solutions. Thus, the agent's responses can improve in both
quality and responsivity.
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