论文标题
人类,动物和机器人中的身体模型:机制和可塑性
Body models in humans, animals, and robots: mechanisms and plasticity
论文作者
论文摘要
人类和动物在结合来自多种感觉方式,控制其复杂身体的信息,适应生长,失败或使用工具的信息方面表现出色。这些功能在机器人中也非常可取。它们在某种程度上被机器展示 - 但是,这种情况通常是人造生物落后。关键基础是人,人类,动物或机器人形成的身体的内部表示。在生物领域中,通过各种学科产生了身体形象,身体模式和其他人的概念,已经积累了证据。在机器人技术中,机器人的模型是必不可少的组件,可控制机器。在本文中,我将生物学中身体表征的特征与它们的机器人对应物进行了比较,并将其与我们观察到的性能差异联系起来。我提出了许多有关此类身体模型的性质的轴:固定与塑料,Amodal与模态,显式与隐式,串行与平行,模块化,整体和集中式与分布式。一个有趣的趋势出现了:在许多轴上,从机器人身体模型,身体图像,身体模式到章鱼等下动物中的身体代表都有一个序列。从某种意义上说,机器人与伊恩·沃特曼(Ian Waterman)有很多共同点 - “失去身体的人” - 因为他们依靠明确的,垂直的身体模型(身体形象为极端),并且缺乏任何隐含的,多峰的表示(例如身体模式)。然后,我将详细介绍机器人如何告知处理身体表征的生物科学,最后,我将研究“大脑中的身体”的哪些特征应转移到机器人中,从而产生更适应性和弹性,自我校准的机器。
Humans and animals excel in combining information from multiple sensory modalities, controlling their complex bodies, adapting to growth, failures, or using tools. These capabilities are also highly desirable in robots. They are displayed by machines to some extent - yet, as is so often the case, the artificial creatures are lagging behind. The key foundation is an internal representation of the body that the agent - human, animal, or robot - has developed. In the biological realm, evidence has been accumulated by diverse disciplines giving rise to the concepts of body image, body schema, and others. In robotics, a model of the robot is an indispensable component that enables to control the machine. In this article I compare the character of body representations in biology with their robotic counterparts and relate that to the differences in performance that we observe. I put forth a number of axes regarding the nature of such body models: fixed vs. plastic, amodal vs. modal, explicit vs. implicit, serial vs. parallel, modular vs. holistic, and centralized vs. distributed. An interesting trend emerges: on many of the axes, there is a sequence from robot body models, over body image, body schema, to the body representation in lower animals like the octopus. In some sense, robots have a lot in common with Ian Waterman - "the man who lost his body" - in that they rely on an explicit, veridical body model (body image taken to the extreme) and lack any implicit, multimodal representation (like the body schema) of their bodies. I will then detail how robots can inform the biological sciences dealing with body representations and finally, I will study which of the features of the "body in the brain" should be transferred to robots, giving rise to more adaptive and resilient, self-calibrating machines.