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Script theory, developed in late 1970s by Roger Schank, is a cognitivist theory orientated on explaining of structure of knowledge, especially on representation of complex event sequences. Script theory is an extension of schema theory.
The concept of a script was introduced by Schank and Abelson1) and later further developed by Schank2)3). There are several definitions of scripts such as:
Scripts consist of a sequence of actions or events necessary to achieve a goal. They also if necessary include relevant people, locations or objects.
Schank7) often uses an example of a restaurant script. When in a restaurant, one behaves according to restaurant script: he finds a free place, sits, waits for the waiter to take his order and finally eats his meal. He does not have to convince the waiter and the cook to feed him every time he comes to the restaurant since they are all behaving in accordance with the restaurant schema and assigned roles.
Aside from their original application in language processing explanation, Schank also explains his dynamic memory model using scripts. Memory is organized in terms of scripts, plans and goals.