Abstract
We present a system that uses evolutionary optimization to suggest new story-world events that, if added to an existing interactive story, would most improve the average interactive experience, according to author-supplied criteria. In doing so, we aim to apply some of the ideas from drama-managed storytelling, such as authorial aesthetic control, in an unguided setting more akin to emergent storytelling: Rather than guiding or directing a player towards an experience in line with an author's aesthetic goals, the storyworld is augmented with new content in a way that will tend to align with an author's goals, even if the player is not guided. In this paper, we present an offline system, and demonstrate its robustness to a number of variations in authorial criteria and player-model assumptions. This is intended to lay the groundwork for a future system that would generate new content online, allowing for interactive stories larger than those explicitly written by the author. © 2011, Association for the Advancement of Artificial.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Giannatos, S., Nelson, M. J., Cheong, Y. G., & Yannakakis, G. N. (2011). Suggesting new plot elements for an interactive story. In Intelligent Narrative Technologies IV - Papers from the 2011 AIIDE Workshop (pp. 25–30). https://doi.org/10.1609/aiide.v7i2.12474
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