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TOWARDS A SPATIAL LANGUAGE FOR MOBILE ROBOTS

Ruth Schulz, Paul Stockwell, Mari Wakabayashi, Janet Wiles

Year
2006
Citations
14

Abstract

We present a framework and first set of simulations for evolving a language for communicating about space. The framework comprises two components: (1) An established mobile robot platform, RatSLAM, which has a "brain" architecture based on rodent hippocampus with the ability to integrate visual and odometric cues to create internal maps of its environment. (2) A language learning system based on a neural network architecture that has been designed and implemented with the ability to evolve generalizable languages which can be learned by naive learners. A study using visual scenes and internal maps streamed from the simulated world of the robots to evolve languages is presented. This study investigated the structure of the evolved languages showing that with these inputs, expressive languages can effectively categorize the world. Ongoing studies are extending these investigations to evolve languages that use the full power of the robots representations in populations of agents.

Keywords

Mobile robotComputer scienceRobotHuman–computer interactionArtificial intelligence

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