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Matessa, M. (2003). Measures of Adaptive Communication. In: Weibelzahl, S. and
Paramythis, A. (eds.). Proceedings of the Second Workshop on Empirical Evaluation of
Adaptive Systems, held at the 9th International Conference on User Modeling UM2003,
Pittsburgh.
Adaptive communication has been theorized to be beneficial for the
efficiency of tasks involving communication. This paper describes a study where
accommodating simulated agents adapted to their human partners’ word choice and
non-accommodating agents purposely chose different but equivalent words. Both
agents adapted to message length, which, along with task completion time, was used
as a dependent measure of efficiency. Human subjects paired with accommodating
agents were shown to be more efficient than subjects paired with non-accommodating
agents, and survey ratings of cooperativeness and ability were
higher for the accommodating agents.
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