Abstract
What would it take to teach a computer to play a game entirely through language and sketching? In this paper, we present an implemented program through which an instructor can teach the rules of simple board games using such input. We describe the architecture, information flow, and vocabulary of instructional events and walk through an annotated example. In our approach, the instructional and communication events guide abductive reasoning for language interpretation and help to integrate information from sketching and language. Having a general target representation enables the learning process to be viewed more as translation and problem solving than as induction. Lastly, learning by demonstration complements and extends instruction, resulting in concrete, operational rules.