Variety Wins: Soccer-Playing Robots and Infant Walking
Although both infancy and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are interested in developing systems that produce adaptive, functional behavior, the two disciplines rarely capitalize on their complementary expertise. Here, we used soccer-playing robots to test a central question about the develop...
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Published in | Frontiers in neurorobotics Vol. 12; p. 19 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
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09.05.2018
Frontiers Media S.A |
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Abstract | Although both infancy and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are interested in developing systems that produce adaptive, functional behavior, the two disciplines rarely capitalize on their complementary expertise. Here, we used soccer-playing robots to test a central question about the development of infant walking. During natural activity, infants' locomotor paths are immensely varied. They walk along curved, multi-directional paths with frequent starts and stops. Is the variability observed in spontaneous infant walking a "feature" or a "bug?" In other words, is variability beneficial for functional walking performance? To address this question, we trained soccer-playing robots on walking paths generated by infants during free play and tested them in simulated games of "RoboCup." In Tournament 1, we compared the functional performance of a simulated robot soccer team trained on infants' natural paths with teams trained on less varied, geometric paths-straight lines, circles, and squares. Across 1,000 head-to-head simulated soccer matches, the infant-trained team consistently beat all teams trained with less varied walking paths. In Tournament 2, we compared teams trained on different clusters of infant walking paths. The team trained with the most varied combination of path shape, step direction, number of steps, and number of starts and stops outperformed teams trained with less varied paths. This evidence indicates that variety is a crucial feature supporting functional walking performance. More generally, we propose that robotics provides a fruitful avenue for testing hypotheses about infant development; reciprocally, observations of infant behavior may inform research on artificial intelligence. |
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AbstractList | Although both infancy and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are interested in developing systems that produce adaptive, functional behavior, the two disciplines rarely capitalize on their complementary expertise. Here, we used soccer-playing robots to test a central question about the development of infant walking. During natural activity, infants' locomotor paths are immensely varied. They walk along curved, multi-directional paths with frequent starts and stops. Is the variability observed in spontaneous infant walking a “feature” or a “bug?” In other words, is variability beneficial for functional walking performance? To address this question, we trained soccer-playing robots on walking paths generated by infants during free play and tested them in simulated games of “RoboCup.” In Tournament 1, we compared the functional performance of a simulated robot soccer team trained on infants' natural paths with teams trained on less varied, geometric paths—straight lines, circles, and squares. Across 1,000 head-to-head simulated soccer matches, the infant-trained team consistently beat all teams trained with less varied walking paths. In Tournament 2, we compared teams trained on different clusters of infant walking paths. The team trained with the most varied combination of path shape, step direction, number of steps, and number of starts and stops outperformed teams trained with less varied paths. This evidence indicates that variety is a crucial feature supporting functional walking performance. More generally, we propose that robotics provides a fruitful avenue for testing hypotheses about infant development; reciprocally, observations of infant behavior may inform research on artificial intelligence. Although both infancy and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are interested in developing systems that produce adaptive, functional behavior, the two disciplines rarely capitalize on their complementary expertise. Here, we used soccer-playing robots to test a central question about the development of infant walking. During natural activity, infants’ locomotor paths are immensely varied. They walk along curved, multi-directional paths with frequent starts and stops. Is the variability observed in spontaneous infant walking a “feature” or a “bug”? In other words, is variability beneficial for functional walking performance? To address this question, we trained soccer-playing robots on walking paths generated by infants during free play and tested them in simulated games of “RoboCup.” In Tournament 1, we compared the functional performance of a simulated robot soccer team trained on infants’ natural paths with teams trained on less varied, geometric paths—straight lines, circles, and squares. Across 1000 head-to-head simulated soccer matches, the infant-trained team consistently beat all teams trained with less varied walking paths. In Tournament 2, we compared teams trained on different clusters of infant walking paths. The team trained with the most varied combination of path shape, step direction, number of steps, and number of starts and stops outperformed teams trained with less varied paths. This evidence indicates that variety is a crucial, functional feature supporting functional walking performance. More generally, we propose that robotics provides a fruitful avenue for testing hypotheses about infant development; reciprocally, behavioral observations of infant behavior may inform research on artificial intelligence. |
Author | Adolph, Karen E MacAlpine, Patrick Hasan, Shohan Ossmy, Ori Hoch, Justine E Stone, Peter |
AuthorAffiliation | 2 Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin , Austin, TX , United States 1 Department of Psychology, New York University , New York, NY , United States |
AuthorAffiliation_xml | – name: 2 Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin , Austin, TX , United States – name: 1 Department of Psychology, New York University , New York, NY , United States |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Ori surname: Ossmy fullname: Ossmy, Ori organization: Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, United States – sequence: 2 givenname: Justine E surname: Hoch fullname: Hoch, Justine E organization: Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, United States – sequence: 3 givenname: Patrick surname: MacAlpine fullname: MacAlpine, Patrick organization: Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States – sequence: 4 givenname: Shohan surname: Hasan fullname: Hasan, Shohan organization: Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, United States – sequence: 5 givenname: Peter surname: Stone fullname: Stone, Peter organization: Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, United States – sequence: 6 givenname: Karen E surname: Adolph fullname: Adolph, Karen E organization: Department of Psychology, New York University, New York, NY, United States |
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Copyright | 2018. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License. Copyright © 2018 Ossmy, Hoch, MacAlpine, Hasan, Stone and Adolph. 2018 Ossmy, Hoch, MacAlpine, Hasan, Stone and Adolph |
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Keywords | bipedal robotics robot soccer infant walking locomotion natural gait |
Language | English |
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Snippet | Although both infancy and artificial intelligence (AI) researchers are interested in developing systems that produce adaptive, functional behavior, the two... |
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SubjectTerms | Artificial intelligence Babies bipedal robotics Fitness equipment Hypotheses infant walking Infants International conferences locomotion natural gait Neuroscience Researchers robot soccer Robots Skills Soccer Tournaments & championships Walking |
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Title | Variety Wins: Soccer-Playing Robots and Infant Walking |
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