Proceedings of 1st Workshop on Advancing Artificial Intelligence through Theory of Mind

Abrini, Mouad, Abend, Omri, Acklin, Dina, Admoni, Henny, Aichinger, Gregor, Alon, Nitay, Ashktorab, Zahra, Atreja, Ashish, Auron, Moises, Aufreiter, Alexander, Awasthi, Raghav, Banerjee, Soumya, Barnby, Joe M., Basappa, Rhea, Bergsmann, Severin, Bouneffouf, Djallel, Callaghan, Patrick, Cavazza, Marc, Chaminade, Thierry, Chernova, Sonia, Chetouan, Mohamed, Choudhury, Moumita, Cleeremans, Axel, Cywinski, Jacek B., Cuzzolin, Fabio, Deng, Hokin, Diamond, N'yoma, Di Pasquasio, Camilla, Dumas, Guillaume, van Duijn, Max, Dwarikanath, Mahapatra, Gao, Qingying, Goel, Ashok, Goldstein, Rebecca, Gombolay, Matthew, Gonzalez, Gabriel Enrique, Halilovic, Amar, Halmdienst, Tobias, Islam, Mahimul, Jara-Ettinger, Julian, Kastel, Natalie, Keydar, Renana, Khanna, Ashish K., Khoramshahi, Mahdi, Kim, JiHyun, Kim, MiHyeon, Kim, YoungBin, Krivic, Senka, Krasnytskyi, Nikita, Kumar, Arun, Kwon, JuneHyoung, Lee, Eunju, Lee, Shane, Lewis, Peter R., Li, Xue, Li, Yijiang, Lewandowski, Michal, Lloyd, Nathan, Luebbers, Matthew B., Luo, Dezhi, Lyu, Haiyun, Mahapatra, Dwarikanath, Maheshwari, Kamal, Mainali, Mallika, Mathur, Piyush, Mederitsch, Patrick, Miura, Shuwa, de Miranda, Manuel Preston, Mirsky, Reuth, Mishra, Shreya, Moorman, Nina, Morrison, Katelyn, Muchovej, John, Nessler, Bernhard, Nessler, Felix, Nguyen, Hieu Minh Jord, Ortego, Abby, Papay, Francis A., Pasquali, Antoine, Rahimi, Hamed, Raghu, Charumathi, Royka, Amanda, Sarkadi, Stefan, Scheuerman, Jaelle, Schmid, Simon, Schrater, Paul, Sen, Anik, Sheikhbahaee, Zahra, Shi, Ke, Simmons, Reid, Singh, Nishant, Smith, Mason O., van der Meulen, Ramira, Solaki, Anthia, Sun, Haoran, Szolga, Viktor, Taylor, Matthew E., Taylor, Travis, Van Waveren, Sanne, Vargas, Juan David, Verbrugge, Rineke, Wagner, Eitan, Weisz, Justin D., Wen, Ximing, Yeoh, William, Zhang, Wenlong, Zhao, Michelle, Zilberstein, Shlomo

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

The ability to attribute mental states--such as beliefs, intentions, desires, and emotions--to oneself and others, is essential for predicting behavior. Thus ToM principles are crucial to enable better interpretation and response to human actions and intentions as AI systems evolve towards greater interactivity. The purpose of this volume is to provide an open access and curated anthology for the ToM and AI research community. The first Theory of Mind for AI (ToM4AI) workshop took place on March 3, 2025, as part of the AAAI workshop series. It was an epic gathering of researchers from diverse fields, ranging from psychology, cognitive science, neuroscience, robotics, and AI, to explore the implications of ToM in developing advanced AI systems.

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