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Connection Science | 2004

Evolving cognitive scaffolding and environment adaptation: a new research direction for evolutionary robotics

Tom Ziemke; Nicklas Bergfeldt; Gunnar Buason; Tarja Susi; Henrik Svensson

Many researchers in embodied cognitive science and artificial intelligence, and evolutionary robotics in particular, emphasize the interaction of brain, body and environment as crucial to the emergence of intelligent, adaptive behaviour. Accordingly, the interaction between agent and environment, as well as the co-adaptation of artificial brains and bodies, has been the focus of much research in evolutionary robotics. Hence, there are plenty of studies of robotic agents/species adapting to a given environment. Many animals, on the other hand, in particular humans, to some extent can choose to adapt the environment to their own needs instead of adapting (only) themselves. That alternative has been studied relatively little in robot experiments. This paper, therefore, presents some simple initial simulation experiments, in a delayed response task setting, that illustrate how the evolution of environment adaptation can serve to provide cognitive scaffolding that reduces the requirements for individual agents. Furthermore, theoretical implications, open questions and future research directions for evolutionary robotics are discussed.


Cognition, Technology & Work | 2014

Technostress in the office: a distributed cognition perspective on human---technology interaction

Charlott Sellberg; Tarja Susi

Technology is a mobile and integral part of many work places, and computers and other information and communication technology have made many users’ work life easier, but technology can also contribute to problems in the cognitive work environment and, over time, create technostress. Much previous research on technostress has focused on the use of digital technology and its effects, measured by questionnaires, but in order to further examine how technostress arises in the modern workplace, a wider perspective on interactions between people and technology is needed. This paper applies a distributed cognition perspective to human–technology interaction, investigated through an observational field study. Distributed cognition focuses on the organisation of cognitive systems, and technostress in this perspective becomes an emergent phenomenon within a complex and dynamic socio-technical system. A well-established questionnaire was also used (for a limited sample), to gain a frame of reference for the results from the qualitative part of the study. The implications are that common questionnaire-based approaches very well can and should be complemented with a broader perspective to study causes of technostress. Based on the present study, a redefinition of technostress is also proposed.


Cognitive Systems Research | 2016

Social cognition, artefacts, and stigmergy revisited

Tarja Susi

A number of different coordination concepts have been developed to explain how individual activities are coordinated on a social level, and the variety of concepts shows there is an interest in many domains to find such explanations. Stigmergy being one of them, has come to be increasingly applied on various kinds of human activities. In other domains we find other concepts for explaining how environmental resources contribute to work activities or how people use them to structure their work. This paper discusses different coordination concepts, including stigmergy, articulation work, coordination mechanisms, triggers, placeholders, and entry points. The first three concepts are explicitly concerned with coordination among several agents, while the last three instead concern individual activities, but arguably they can be extended to the social level. They also bring an explicitly cognitive dimension to coordination, which is not as salient in the former concepts. The concepts discussed here do have some similarities, but also important differences. They may not be interchangeable, but they could complement each other, or contribute to further elaboration of existing concepts. The stigmergic sign, e.g., could usefully be developed to recognise qualitative differences in its role as a coordination mechanism.


Archive | 2007

Serious Games : An Overview

Tarja Susi; Mikael Johannesson; Per Backlund


Cognitive Systems Research | 2001

Social cognition, artefacts, and stigmergy: A comparative analysis of theoretical frameworks for the understanding of artefact-mediated collaborative activity

Tarja Susi; Tom Ziemke


Archive | 2006

The puzzle of social activity : the significance of tools in cognition and cooperation

Tarja Susi


Information Fusion | 2012

Information fusion in practice: A distributed cognition perspective on the active role of users

Maria Nilsson; Joeri van Laere; Tarja Susi; Tom Ziemke


Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society | 2003

Beyond the Bounds of Cognition

Tarja Susi; Jessica Lindblom; Tom Ziemke


Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of the Cognitive Science Society | 2004

Artefacts as Mediators of Distributed Social Cognition: A Case Study

Jana Rambusch; Tarja Susi; Tom Ziemke


tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique. Open Access Journal for a Global Sustainable Information Society | 1970

On the subject of objects : Four views on object perception and tool use

Tarja Susi; Tom Ziemke

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