Abstract

Narrative planning generates a sequence of actions which must achieve the author's goal for the story and must be composed only of actions that make sense for the characters who take them. A causally necessary action is one that would make the plan impossible to execute if it were left out. We hypothesize that action sequences which are solutions to narrative planning problems are more likely to feature causally necessary actions than those which are not solutions. In this paper, we show that prioritizing sequences with more causally necessary actions can lead to solutions faster in ten benchmark story planning problems.

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