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Agents & Environment

The document discusses intelligent agents, describing them as entities that perceive their environment through sensors and act upon it through effectors to maximize a performance measure. It outlines different types of agents and environments, explaining rational agents as those that select actions expected to maximize their performance given their perceptions. Additionally, it introduces the PEAS framework for designing agents by specifying their performance measure, environment, actuators, and sensors.

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Arijit Ghosh
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
68 views

Agents & Environment

The document discusses intelligent agents, describing them as entities that perceive their environment through sensors and act upon it through effectors to maximize a performance measure. It outlines different types of agents and environments, explaining rational agents as those that select actions expected to maximize their performance given their perceptions. Additionally, it introduces the PEAS framework for designing agents by specifying their performance measure, environment, actuators, and sensors.

Uploaded by

Arijit Ghosh
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Intelligent Agents

Outline
• Agents and environments
• Rationality
• PEAS (Performance measure,
Environment, Actuators, Sensors)
• Environment types
• Agent types
Agents
• An agent is anything that can be viewed as
perceiving its environment through sensors and
acting upon that environment through actuators
• Human agent: eyes, ears, and other organs for
sensors; hands,
• legs, mouth, and other body parts for actuators
• Robotic agent: cameras and infrared range
finders for sensors;
• various motors for actuators
Agents and environments

• The agent function maps from percept histories


to actions:
[f: P* → A]

• The agent program runs on the physical


architecture to produce f
Vacuum-cleaner world

• Percepts: location and contents, e.g.,


[A,Dirty]
• Actions: Left, Right, Suck, NoOp
Rational agents
• An agent should strive to "do the right thing",
based on what it can perceive and the actions it
can perform. The right action is the one that will
cause the agent to be most successful
• Performance measure: An objective criterion for
success of an agent's behavior
• E.g., performance measure of a vacuum-cleaner
agent could be amount of dirt cleaned up,
amount of time taken, amount of electricity
consumed, amount of noise generated, etc.
Rational agents
• Rational Agent: For each possible percept
sequence, a rational agent should select
an action that is expected to maximize its
performance measure, given the evidence
provided by the percept sequence and
whatever built-in knowledge the agent has.
• Rationality is distinct from omniscience
(all-knowing with infinite knowledge)
Rational agents
• Agents can perform actions in order to
modify future percepts so as to obtain
useful information (information gathering,
exploration)
• An agent is autonomous if its behavior is
determined by its own experience (with
ability to learn and adapt)
PEAS
• PEAS: Performance measure, Environment,
Actuators, Sensors
• Must first specify the setting for intelligent agent
design
• Consider, e.g., the task of designing an
automated taxi driver:
– Performance measure
– Environment
– Actuators
– Sensors
PEAS
• Must first specify the setting for intelligent agent
design
• Consider, e.g., the task of designing an
automated taxi driver:
– Performance measure: Safe, fast, legal, comfortable
trip, maximize profits
– Environment: Roads, other traffic, pedestrians,
customers
– Actuators: Steering wheel, accelerator, brake, signal,
horn
PEAS
• Agent: Medical diagnosis system
• Performance measure: Healthy patient,
minimize costs, lawsuits
• Environment: Patient, hospital, staff
• Actuators: Screen display (questions,
tests, diagnoses, treatments, referrals)
• Sensors: Keyboard (entry of symptoms,
findings, patient's answers)
• Agent: Part-picking robot
PEAS
• Performance measure: Percentage of
parts in correct bins
• Environment: Conveyor belt with parts,
bins
• Actuators: Jointed arm and hand
• Sensors: Camera, joint angle sensors
• Agent: Interactive English tutor
• Performance measure: Maximize
student's score on test
PEAS
• Environment: Set of students
• Actuators: Screen display (exercises,
suggestions, corrections)
• Sensors: Keyboard
Types of Environment

• Fully observable (vs. partially observable): An agent's


sensors give it access to the complete state of the
environment at each point in time.

• Deterministic (vs. stochastic): The next state of the


environment is completely determined by the current
state and the action executed by the agent. (If the
environment is deterministic except for the actions of
other agents, then the environment is strategic)

• Episodic (vs. sequential): The agent's experience is


divided into atomic "episodes" (each episode consists of
the agent perceiving and then performing a single
action), and the choice of action in each episode
depends only on the episode itself.
Types of Environment

• Static (vs. dynamic): The environment is


unchanged while an agent is deliberating. (The
environment is semidynamic if the environment
itself does not change with the passage of time
but the agent's performance score does)

• Discrete (vs. continuous): A limited number of


distinct, clearly defined percepts and actions.

• Single agent (vs. multiagent): An agent


operating by itself in an environment.
Types of Environment
Example :-

Chess with Chess without Taxi driving


a clock a clock
Fully observable Yes Yes No
Deterministic Strategic Strategic No
Episodic No No No
Static Semi Yes No
Discrete Yes Yes No
Single agent No No No

• The environment type largely determines the agent design

• The real world is (of course) partially observable, stochastic,


sequential, dynamic, continuous, multi-agent
Agent functions and programs
• An agent is completely specified by the
agent function mapping percept
sequences to actions
• One agent function (or a small
equivalence class) is rational
• Aim: find a way to implement the rational
agent function concisely
Table-lookup agent
• \input{algorithms/table-agent-algorithm}
• Drawbacks:
– Huge table
– Take a long time to build the table
– No autonomy
– Even with learning, need a long time to learn
the table entries
Agent types
• Four basic types in order of increasing
generality:
• Simple reflex agents
• Model-based reflex agents
• Goal-based agents
• Utility-based agents
Simple reflex agents
Model-based reflex agents
Goal-based agents
Utility-based agents
Learning agents

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