Results 1 - 10
of
65
The unbearable automaticity of being
- American Psychologist
, 1999
"... What was noted by E. J. hanger (1978) remains true today: that much of contemporary psychological research is based on the assumption that people are consciously and systematically processing incoming information in order to construe and interpret their world and to plan and engage in courses of act ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 99 (4 self)
- Add to MetaCart
What was noted by E. J. hanger (1978) remains true today: that much of contemporary psychological research is based on the assumption that people are consciously and systematically processing incoming information in order to construe and interpret their world and to plan and engage in courses of action. As did E. J. hanger, the authors question this assumption. First, they review evidence that the ability to exercise such conscious, intentional control is actually quite limited, so that most of moment-to-moment psychological life must occur through nonconscious means if it is to occur at all. The authors then describe the different possible mechanisms that produce automatic, environmental control over these various phenomena and review evidence establishing both the existence of these mechanisms as well as their consequences for judgments, emotions, and
Developmental robotics: a survey
- CONNECTION SCIENCE
, 2004
"... Developmental robotics is an emerging field located at the intersection of robotics, cognitive science and developmental sciences. This paper elucidates the main reasons and key motivations behind the convergence of fields with seemingly disparate interests, and shows why developmental robotics migh ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 76 (7 self)
- Add to MetaCart
Developmental robotics is an emerging field located at the intersection of robotics, cognitive science and developmental sciences. This paper elucidates the main reasons and key motivations behind the convergence of fields with seemingly disparate interests, and shows why developmental robotics might prove to be beneficial for all fields involved. The methodology advocated is synthetic and two-pronged: on the one hand, it employs robots to instantiate models originating from developmental sciences; on the other hand, it aims to develop better robotic systems by exploiting insights gained from studies on ontogenetic development. This paper gives a survey of the relevant research issues and points to some future research directions.
Imitation as a dual-route process featuring predictive and learning components: a biologically plausible computational model
, 2002
"... ..."
Sensory-Motor Primitives as a Basis for Imitation: Linking Perception to Action and Biology to Robotics
- Imitation in Animals and Artifacts
, 2000
"... ing away from the specific coding of the spinal fields, the examples from neurobiology provide the framework for a motor control system based on a small number of additive primitives (or basis behaviors) sufficient for a rich output movement repertoire. Our previous work (Matari'c 1995, Matari'c 199 ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 72 (17 self)
- Add to MetaCart
ing away from the specific coding of the spinal fields, the examples from neurobiology provide the framework for a motor control system based on a small number of additive primitives (or basis behaviors) sufficient for a rich output movement repertoire. Our previous work (Matari'c 1995, Matari'c 1997), inspired by the same biological results, has successfully applied the idea of basis behaviors to control of mobile robots 6 by fitting it directly into the modular behavior-based control paradigm. Applictions of schema theory (Arbib 1992) to behavior-based mobile robots (Arkin 1987) have employed a similar notion of composable behaviors, stemming from foundations in neuroscience (Arbib 1981, Arbib 1989). The idea of using such primitives for articulator control has been recently studied in robotics. Williamson (1996) and Marjanovi'c, Scassellati & Williamson (1996) developed a 6 DOF (degrees of freedom) robot arm controller. While in the biological and mobile robotics work primitives c...
When Push comes to Shove: A Computational Model of the Role of Motor Control in the Acquisition of Action Verbs
, 1997
"... Children learn a variety of verbs for hand actions starting in their second year of life. The semantic distinctions can be subtle, and they vary across languages, yet they are learned quickly. Howis this possible? This dissertation explores the hypothesis that to explain the acquisition and use of a ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 57 (1 self)
- Add to MetaCart
Children learn a variety of verbs for hand actions starting in their second year of life. The semantic distinctions can be subtle, and they vary across languages, yet they are learned quickly. Howis this possible? This dissertation explores the hypothesis that to explain the acquisition and use of action verbs, motor control must be taken into account. It presents a model of embodied semantics|based on the principles of neural computation in general and on the human motor system in particular|which takes a set of labelled actions and learns both to label novel actions and to obey verbal commands. Akey feature of the model is the executing schema, anactivecontroller mechanism which, by actually driving behavior, allows the model to carry out verbal commands. A hard-wired mechanism links the activity of executing schemas to a set of linguistically important features including hand posture, joint motions, force, aspect and goals. The feature set is relatively small and is xed, helping to make learning tractable. Moreover, the use of traditional feature structures facilitates the use of model merging, a Bayesian probabilistic learning algorithm which rapidly learns plausible word meanings, automatically determines an appropriate number of senses for each verb, and can plausibly be mapped to a connectionist recruitment
Fixation Behavior in Observation and Imitation of Human Movement
- Cognitive Brain Research
, 1998
"... This paper describes experiments performed with forty subjects wearing an eye-tracker and watching and imitating videos of finger, hand, and arm movements. For all types of stimuli, the subjects tended to fixate on the hand, regardless of whether they were imitating or just watching. The results len ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 29 (10 self)
- Add to MetaCart
This paper describes experiments performed with forty subjects wearing an eye-tracker and watching and imitating videos of finger, hand, and arm movements. For all types of stimuli, the subjects tended to fixate on the hand, regardless of whether they were imitating or just watching. The results lend insight into the connection between visual perception and motor control, suggesting that: 1) people analyze human arm movements largely by tracking the hand or the end-point, even if the movement is performed with the entire arm, and 2) when imitating, people use internal innate and learned models of movement, possibly in the form of motor primitives, to recreate the details of whole-arm posture and movement from end-point trajectories. Keywords: Perceptual-motor interaction; Eye-tracking; Movement imitation Theme: Motor Systems and Sensorimotor Integration Topic: Control of Posture and Movement 1 Introduction Imitation is one of the most ubiquitous forms of human learning. What appea...
Explaining facial imitation: a theoretical model
- Early Development and Parenting
, 1997
"... Imitation is a mechanism for the intergenerational transmission of acquired characteristics. Before explicit linguistic instruction, infants learn many of the skills, customs, and behaviour patterns of their culture through imitation. In imitating, infants use another's behaviours as a basis for the ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 28 (2 self)
- Add to MetaCart
Imitation is a mechanism for the intergenerational transmission of acquired characteristics. Before explicit linguistic instruction, infants learn many of the skills, customs, and behaviour patterns of their culture through imitation. In imitating, infants use another's behaviours as a basis for their own, despite differences in body size, perspective of view, and modality through which self and other can be perceived. As ubiquitous and useful as imitation is, how imitation is accomplished poses one of the deeper puzzles in infancy.
Synthetic Brain Imaging: Grasping, Mirror Neurons and Imitation
, 2000
"... The article contributes to the quest to relate global data on brain and behavior (e.g. from PET, Positron Emission Tomography, and fMRI, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) to the underpinning neural networks. Models tied to human brain imaging data often focus on a few "boxes" based on brain reg ..."
Abstract
-
Cited by 25 (3 self)
- Add to MetaCart
The article contributes to the quest to relate global data on brain and behavior (e.g. from PET, Positron Emission Tomography, and fMRI, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) to the underpinning neural networks. Models tied to human brain imaging data often focus on a few "boxes" based on brain regions associated with exceptionally high blood flow, rather than analyzing the cooperative computation of multiple brain regions. For analysis directly at the level of such data, a schema-based model may be most appropriate. To further address neurophysiological data, the Synthetic PET imaging method uses computational models of biological neural circuitry based on animal data to predict and analyze the results of human PET studies. This technique makes use of the hypothesis that rCBF (regional cerebral blood flow) is correlated with the integrated synaptic activity in a localized brain region. We also describe the possible extension of the Synthetic PET method to fMRI. The second half of the...

