Using the Wizard of Oz Method to Train Persuasive Agents

  • Authors:
  • Maiko Kawasoe;Tatsuya Narita;Yasuhiko Kitamura

  • Affiliations:
  • School of Science and Technology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Hyogo, Japan 669-1337;School of Science and Technology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Hyogo, Japan 669-1337;School of Science and Technology, Kwansei Gakuin University, Hyogo, Japan 669-1337

  • Venue:
  • CIA '08 Proceedings of the 12th international workshop on Cooperative Information Agents XII
  • Year:
  • 2008

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Abstract

Persuasive conversational agents persuade users to change their attitudes or behaviors through conversation and are expected to be applied as virtual sales-clerks in e-shopping sites. Developing such an agent requires a conversation model that identifies the most appropriate responses to the user's inputs. To create such a model, we propose the approach of combining a learning agent with the Wizard of Oz method; in this approach, a person (called the Wizard) talks to the user pretending to be the agent. The agent learns from the conversations between the Wizard and the user and constructs its own conversation model. In this approach, the Wizard has to reply to most of the user's inputs at the beginning, but the burden gradually falls because the agent learns how to reply as the conversation model grows.Every persuasive conversation has the goal of persuading the user and ends with success or failure. We introduce a goal-oriented conversation model that can represent the success probability of persuasion and a learning method to update the model depending on the success/failure of the persuasive conversation. We introduce a learning persuasive agent that implements the conversation model and the learning method and evaluate it in the situation wherein the agent persuades users to choose one type of digital camera over another. The agent could succeed in reducing the Wizard's inputs by 48%, and, more interestingly, succeeded in persuading 2 users without any help from the Wizard.