| Literature DB >> 32733858 |
Abstract
In recent studies, robots are used to stimulate living systems in controlled experimental settings. This research strategy is here called interactive biorobotics, to distinguish it from classical biorobotics, in which robots are used to simulate, rather than to stimulate, living system behavior. This article offers a methodological analysis of interactive biorobotics and has two goals. The first one is to argue that interactive biorobotics is methodologically different, in some important respects, from classical biorobotics and from countless instances of model-based science. It will be shown that interactive biorobotics does not conform to the so-called "understanding by building" approach or synthetic method, and that it illustrates a novel use of models in science. The second goal is to reflect on the logic of interactive biorobotics. A distinction will be made between two classes of studies, which will be called "proximal" and "distal." In proximal studies, experiments involving robot-animal interaction are brought to bear on theoretical hypotheses on robot-animal interaction. In distal studies, experiments involving robot-animal interaction are brought to bear on theoretical hypotheses on animal-animal interaction. Distal studies involve logical steps which may be particularly hard to justify. This distinction, together with a methodological reflection on the relationship between the context in which the experiments are carried out and the context in which the conclusions are expected to hold, will lead to a checklist of questions which may be useful to justify and evaluate the validity of interactive biorobotics studies. The reconstruction of the logic of interactive biorobotics made here, though preliminary, may contribute to justifying the important role that robots, as tool for stimulating living systems, can play in the contemporary life sciences.Entities:
Keywords: biologically inspired robotics; biorobotics; ethorobotics; interactive robotics; robot-animal interaction
Year: 2020 PMID: 32733858 PMCID: PMC7360728 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2020.00637
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Methodological differences between classical and interactive biorobotics.
| (A) What is the role of the robot? | The robot is used as a surrogate to reason about the target system | The robot is used to stimulate the target system |
| (B) Does the robot replace the target living system? | Yes | No |
| (C) Is the target living system part of the experimental scenario? | No | Yes |
| (D) Is the robot the target of experimental analysis? | Yes | No |
Figure 1Representation of the basic structure of classical (A) and interactive (B) biorobotics. In classical biorobotics, the robot is used as a surrogate to reason on the target living system, the robot replaces the target system, the target system is not part of the experimental scenario, and the target of the analysis is the robot. In interactive biorobotics, the robot is used to stimulate the target living system, the robot does not replace the target system, the target system is part of the experimental scenario, and the target of the analysis is the target living system.
Methodological differences between classical and interactive biorobotics, with reference to the four case studies.
| A | ||||
| B | ||||
| C | ||||
| D | ||||
Figure 2When, in interactive biorobotics, the robot replaces a conspecific, it does not replace the target system.
Figure 3Prima facie, what we call a (robotic) model R is just a concrete system. (A) Under what conditions (B) can it be regarded as a scientific model of another concrete (living) system T?
Classical and interactive biorobotics are models, according to the similarity and inferential conceptions.
| Classical biorobotics (Bou Mansour et al., | |||
| Interactive biorobotics (Romano et al., | |||
Figure 4Proximal and distal studies.
Figure 5The structure of interactive biorobotics experiments.
Figure 6A representation of the logic of distal studies.