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Cognitive Navigation Based on Nonuniform Gabor Space Sampling, Unsupervised Growing Networks, and Reinforcement Learning

Angelo Arleo, Fabrizio Smeraldi, Wulfram Gerstner

Year
2004
Citations
96

Abstract

We study spatial learning and navigation for autonomous agents. A state space representation is constructed by unsupervised Hebbian learning during exploration. As a result of learning, a representation of the continuous two-dimensional (2-D) manifold in the high-dimensional input space is found. The representation consists of a population of localized overlapping place fields covering the 2-D space densely and uniformly. This space coding is comparable to the representation provided by hippocampal place cells in rats. Place fields are learned by extracting spatio-temporal properties of the environment from sensory inputs. The visual scene is modeled using the responses of modified Gabor filters placed at the nodes of a sparse Log-polar graph. Visual sensory aliasing is eliminated by taking into account self-motion signals via path integration. This solves the hidden state problem and provides a suitable representation for applying reinforcement learning in continuous space for action selection. A temporal-difference prediction scheme is used to learn sensorimotor mappings to perform goal-oriented navigation. Population vector coding is employed to interpret ensemble neural activity. The model is validated on a mobile Khepera miniature robot.

Keywords

Hebbian theoryArtificial intelligenceComputer sciencePopulationReinforcement learningUnsupervised learningPattern recognition (psychology)Neural codingFeature learningArtificial neural network

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