Literature DB >> 24806653

Developmental perception of the self and action.

Ryo Saegusa, Giorgio Metta, Giulio Sandini, Lorenzo Natale.   

Abstract

This paper describes a developmental framework for action-driven perception in anthropomorphic robots. The key idea of the framework is that action generation develops the agent's perception of its own body and actions. Action-driven development is critical for identifying changing body parts and understanding the effects of actions in unknown or nonstationary environments. We embedded minimal knowledge into the robot's cognitive system in the form of motor synergies and actions to allow motor exploration. The robot voluntarily generates actions and develops the ability to perceive its own body and the effect that it generates on the environment. The robot, in addition, can compose this kind of learned primitives to perform complex actions and characterize them in terms of their sensory effects. After learning, the robot can recognize manipulative human behaviors with cross-modal anticipation for recovery of unavailable sensory modality, and reproduce the recognized actions afterward. We evaluated the proposed framework in the experiments with a real robot. In the experiments, we achieved autonomous body identification, learning of fixation, reaching and grasping actions, and developmental recognition of human actions as well as their reproduction.

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24806653     DOI: 10.1109/TNNLS.2013.2271793

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Trans Neural Netw Learn Syst        ISSN: 2162-237X            Impact factor:   10.451


  3 in total

1.  Social behaviour as an emergent property of embodied curiosity: a robotics perspective.

Authors:  Goren Gordon
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 6.237

Review 2.  Fusing autonomy and sociality via embodied emergence and development of behaviour and cognition from fetal period.

Authors:  Yasuo Kuniyoshi
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2019-04-29       Impact factor: 6.237

3.  View-Invariant Visuomotor Processing in Computational Mirror Neuron System for Humanoid.

Authors:  Farhan Dawood; Chu Kiong Loo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-03-21       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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