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God Save the Red Queen! Competition in Co-Evolutionary Robotics

Dario Floreano, Stefano Nolfi

Year
1997
Citations
94
Access
Open access

Abstract

In the simplest scenario of two coevolving populations in competition with each other, fitness progress is achieved at disadvantage of the other population's fitness. The everchanging fitness landscape caused by the competing species (named the "Red Queen effect") makes the system dynamics more complex, but it also provides a set of advantages with respect to single-population evolution. Here we present results from an experiment with two mobile robots, a predator equipped with vision and a much faster prey with simpler sensors. Without anyeffort in fitness design, a set of interesting behaviors emerged in relatively short time, such as obstacle avoidance, straightnavigation, visual tracking, object discrimination (robot vs. wall), object following, and others. Although such experiments cannot yet be performed in real-time on populations of robots for technical reasons, the approach seems promising.

Keywords

PopulationRobotArtificial intelligenceSet (abstract data type)Competition (biology)Evolutionary roboticsRoboticsObject (grammar)Computer scienceEcology

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