Constructionist design methodology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Constructionist Design Methodology (CDM) was developed by artificial intelligence (AI) researcher Kristinn R. Thórisson and his students at Columbia University and Reykjavik University for use in the development of cognitive robotics, communicative humanoids and broad AI systems. The creation of such systems requires integration of a large number of functionalities that must be carefully coordinated to achieve coherent system behavior. CDM is based on iterative design steps that lead to the creation of a network of named interacting modules, communicating via explicitly typed streams and discrete messages. CDM has been used in the creation of many systems including robotics, facial animation, large-scale simulation and virtual humans. One of the first systems was MIRAGE, a simulated human in an augmented-reality environment that could interact with people through speech and gesture.
[edit] References
The CDM approach is described in an online semi-tutorial format, and in an article published in A.I. magazine, see Thórisson et al. 2004.
[edit] See also
[edit] External Links
- Mindmakers.org, an online consortium for broad A.I. system research collaboration.
- Mirage project page, one of the first projects to be built using CDM.