People Do Not Just Plan,They Plan to Plan

Authors

  • Mark Ho Princeton University
  • David Abel Brown University
  • Jonathan Cohen Princeton University
  • Michael Littman Brown University
  • Thomas Griffiths Princeton University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i02.5485

Abstract

Planning is useful. It lets people take actions that have desirable long-term consequences. But, planning is hard. It requires thinking about consequences, which consumes limited computational and cognitive resources. Thus, people should plan their actions, but they should also be smart about how they deploy resources used for planning their actions. Put another way, people should also “plan their plans”. Here, we formulate this aspect of planning as a meta-reasoning problem and formalize it in terms of a recursive Bellman objective that incorporates both task rewards and information-theoretic planning costs. Our account makes quantitative predictions about how people should plan and meta-plan as a function of the overall structure of a task, which we test in two experiments with human participants. We find that people's reaction times reflect a planned use of information processing, consistent with our account. This formulation of planning to plan provides new insight into the function of hierarchical planning, state abstraction, and cognitive control in both humans and machines.

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Published

2020-04-03

How to Cite

Ho, M., Abel, D., Cohen, J., Littman, M., & Griffiths, T. (2020). People Do Not Just Plan,They Plan to Plan. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 34(02), 1300-1307. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v34i02.5485

Issue

Section

AAAI Technical Track: Cognitive Modeling