Springer Handbooks, pages 2069-2094

Neurorobotics: From Vision to Action

Publication typeBook Chapter
Publication date2016-07-27
SJR
CiteScore0.5
Impact factor
ISSN25228692, 25228706
Abstract
The lay view of a robot is a mechanical human, and thus robotics has always been inspired by attempts to emulate biology. In this chapter, we extend this biological motivation from humans to animals more generally, but with a focus on the central nervous systems in its relationship to the bodies of these creatures. In particular, we investigate the sensorimotor loop in the execution of sophisticated behavior. Some of these sections concentrate on cases where vision provides key sensory data. Neuroethology neuroethology is the study of the brain mechanisms underlying animal behavior, and Sect. 77.2 exemplifies the lessons it has to offer robotics by looking at optic flow in bees, visually guided behavior in frogs, and navigation in rats, turning then to the coordination of behaviors and the role of attention. Brains are composed of diverse subsystems, many of which are relevant to robotics, but we have chosen just two regions of the mammalian brain for detailed analysis. Section 77.3 presents the cerebellum. While we can plan and execute actions without a cerebellum, the actions are no longer graceful and become uncoordinated. We reveal how a cerebellum can provide a key ingredient in an adaptive control system, tuning parameters both within and between motor schemas. Section 77.4 turns to the mirror system, which provides shared representations which bridge between the execution of an action and the observation of that action when performed by others. We develop a neurobiological model of how learning may forge mirror neurons for hand movements, provide a Bayesian view of a robot mirror system, and discuss what must be added to a mirror system to support robot imitation. We conclude by emphasizing that, while neuroscience can inspire novel robotic designs, it is also the case that robots can be used as embodied test beds for the analysis of brain models.

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GOST Copy
van der Smagt P., Arbib M. A., Metta G. Neurorobotics: From Vision to Action // Springer Handbooks. 2016. pp. 2069-2094.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
van der Smagt P., Arbib M. A., Metta G. Neurorobotics: From Vision to Action // Springer Handbooks. 2016. pp. 2069-2094.
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RIS Copy
TY - GENERIC
DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-32552-1_77
UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-32552-1_77
TI - Neurorobotics: From Vision to Action
T2 - Springer Handbooks
AU - van der Smagt, Patrick
AU - Arbib, Michael A.
AU - Metta, Giorgio
PY - 2016
DA - 2016/07/27
PB - Springer Nature
SP - 2069-2094
SN - 2522-8692
SN - 2522-8706
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@incollection{2016_van der Smagt,
author = {Patrick van der Smagt and Michael A. Arbib and Giorgio Metta},
title = {Neurorobotics: From Vision to Action},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
year = {2016},
pages = {2069--2094},
month = {jul}
}
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