Causal Discovery and Counterfactual Reasoning to Optimize Persuasive Dialogue Policies

Bibliographic Details
Title: Causal Discovery and Counterfactual Reasoning to Optimize Persuasive Dialogue Policies
Authors: Zeng, Donghuo, Legaspi, Roberto, Sun, Yuewen, Dong, Xinshuai, Ikeda, Kazushi, Spirtes, Peter, Zhang, Kun
Publication Year: 2025
Collection: Computer Science
Subject Terms: Computer Science - Computation and Language, Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence, Computer Science - Human-Computer Interaction
More Details: Tailoring persuasive conversations to users leads to more effective persuasion. However, existing dialogue systems often struggle to adapt to dynamically evolving user states. This paper presents a novel method that leverages causal discovery and counterfactual reasoning for optimizing system persuasion capability and outcomes. We employ the Greedy Relaxation of the Sparsest Permutation (GRaSP) algorithm to identify causal relationships between user and system utterance strategies, treating user strategies as states and system strategies as actions. GRaSP identifies user strategies as causal factors influencing system responses, which inform Bidirectional Conditional Generative Adversarial Networks (BiCoGAN) in generating counterfactual utterances for the system. Subsequently, we use the Dueling Double Deep Q-Network (D3QN) model to utilize counterfactual data to determine the best policy for selecting system utterances. Our experiments with the PersuasionForGood dataset show measurable improvements in persuasion outcomes using our approach over baseline methods. The observed increase in cumulative rewards and Q-values highlights the effectiveness of causal discovery in enhancing counterfactual reasoning and optimizing reinforcement learning policies for online dialogue systems.
Comment: 21 pages, 8 figures
Document Type: Working Paper
Access URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2503.16544
Accession Number: edsarx.2503.16544
Database: arXiv
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