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Learning turn and travel actions with an uninterpreted sensorimotor apparatus

David R. Pierce

Year
2002
Citations
4

Abstract

A learning method by which a mobile robot may analyze an initially uninterpreted sensorimotor apparatus and produce a useful characterization of its set of actions is demonstrated. By initially uninterpreted it is meant that the robot is given no knowledge of the structure of its sensory system nor of the effects of its actions. It merely sees and produces vectors of real numbers. The method is applied to the case of a simulated robot with an array of 16 range finders, and a motor apparatus with which it can make combinations of turning and advancing actions. The robot learns a set of primitive actions allowing it to make pure turns (both clockwise and counterclockwise) and pure travels. It is believed that this approach is robust and will apply to sensory systems used for motion detection, such as arrays of photoreceptors or range finders.< <ETX xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">&gt;</ETX>

Keywords

Computer scienceRobotSet (abstract data type)Range (aeronautics)Artificial intelligenceMobile robotMovement (music)Sensory systemMotion (physics)Trajectory

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