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BIOLOGICALLY BASED TOP-DOWN ATTENTION MODULATION FOR HUMANOID INTERACTIONS

Jan Morén, Aleš Ude, Ansgar Koene, Gordon Cheng

Year
2008
Citations
23

Abstract

An adaptive perception system enables humanoid robots to interact with humans and their surroundings in a meaningful context-dependent manner. An important foundation for visual perception is the selectivity of early vision processes that enables the system to filter out low-level unimportant information while attending to features indicated as important by higher-level processes by way of top-down modulation. We present a novel way to integrate top-down and bottom-up processing for achieving such attention-based filtering. We specifically consider the case where the top-down target is not the most salient in any of the used submodalities.

Keywords

Computer scienceSalientPerceptionContext (archaeology)Modulation (music)Human–computer interactionFilter (signal processing)Artificial intelligenceComputer visionNeuroscience

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