Robert Farrell, Rajarshi Das, et al.
AAAI-SS 2010
The recent emergence of Neuro-Symbolic Agent (NeSA) approaches to natural language-based interactions calls for the investigation of model-based approaches. In contrast to model-free approaches, which existing NeSAs take, learning an explicit world model has an interesting potential especially in the explainability, which is one of the key selling points of NeSA. To learn useful world models, we leverage one of the recent neuro-symbolic architectures, Logical Neural Networks (LNN). Here, we describe a method that can learn neuro-symbolic world models on the TextWorld-Commonsense set of games. We then show how this can be improved further by taking inspiration from the concept of proprioception, but for conversation. This is done by enhancing the internal logic state with a memory of previous actions while also guiding future actions by augmenting the learned model with constraints based on this memory. This greatly improves the game-solving agents performance in a TextWorld setting, where the advantage over the baseline is an 85% average steps reduction and x2.3 average score.
Robert Farrell, Rajarshi Das, et al.
AAAI-SS 2010
Chen-chia Chang, Wan-hsuan Lin, et al.
ICML 2025
Daniel Karl I. Weidele, Hendrik Strobelt, et al.
SysML 2019
Gang Liu, Michael Sun, et al.
ICLR 2025