Journal of the Robotics Society of Japan
Online ISSN : 1884-7145
Print ISSN : 0289-1824
ISSN-L : 0289-1824
Paper
A Constructivist Approach to the Principles of Emergence of Intelligence from Humanoid Embodiment
Yasuo KuniyoshiShinji SangawaYuuki TsukaharaShinsuke SuzukiHiroki Mori
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JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2010 Volume 28 Issue 4 Pages 415-434

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Abstract
Early human motor development has the nature of spontaneous exploration and boot-strap learning, leading to open-ended acquisition of versatile flexible motor skills. Since dexterous motor skills often exploit body-environment dynamics, we formulate the developmental principle as the spontaneous exploration of consistent dynamical patterns of the neural-body-environment system. We propose that partially ordered dynamical patterns emergent from chaotic oscillators coupled through embodiment serve as the core driving mechanism of such exploration. A model of neuro-musculo-skeletal system is constructed capturing essential features of biological systems. It consists of a skeleton, muscles, spindles, tendon organs, spinal circuits, medullar circuits, and a basic cortical model. Models of self-organizing cortical areas for primary somatosensory and motor areas are introduced. A human infant model is constructed and put through preliminary experiments. Some meaningful motor behavior emerged including rolling over and crawling-like motion. The results show the possibility that a rich variety of meaningful behavior can be discovered and acquired by the neural-body dynamics without pre-defined coordinated control circuits.
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© 2010 The Robotics Society of Japan
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