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Reinforcing robot perception of multi-modal events through repetition and redundancy and repetition and redundancy

Paul Fitzpatrick, Artur Arsénio, Eduardo Torres-Jara

Year
2006
Citations
15

Abstract

For a robot to be capable of development it must be able to explore its environment and learn from its experiences. It must find (or create) opportunities to experience the unfamiliar in ways that reveal properties valid beyond the immediate context. In this paper, we develop a novel method for using the rhythm of everyday actions as a basis for identifying the characteristic appearance and sounds associated with objects, people, and the robot itself. Our approach is to identify and segment groups of signals in individual modalities (sight, hearing, and proprioception) based on their rhythmic variation, then to identify and bind causally-related groups of signals across different modalities. By including proprioception as a modality, this cross-modal binding method applies to the robot itself, and we report a series of experiments in which the robot learns about the characteristics of its own body.

Keywords

ModalitiesRedundancy (engineering)PerceptionProprioceptionModalComputer scienceRobotModality (human–computer interaction)RhythmHuman–computer interaction

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