Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39216

Distributed Adaptive Control: A Proposal on the Neuronal Organization of Adaptive Goal Oriented Behavior


no-thumbnailView/Open:

 Distributed Adaptive Control A Proposal on the Neuronal Organization of Adaptive Goal.pdf



605,16 kB
Adobe PDF
Share:

This resource is restricted

Title:
Distributed Adaptive Control: A Proposal on the Neuronal Organization of Adaptive Goal Oriented Behavior
Authors:
Duff, Armin
Rennó-Costa, César  
Marcos Sanmartin, Encarnación
Luvizotto, Andre L.
Giovannucci, Andrea  
Sanchez Fibla, Marti  
Bernardet, Ulysses
Verschure, Paul F.M.J.
Editor:
Springer
Issue Date:
2010
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/39216
Abstract:
In behavioral motor coordination and interaction it is a fundamental challenge how an agent can learn to perceive and act in unknown and dynamic environments. At present, it is not clear how an agent can – without any explicitly predefined knowledge – acquire internal representations of the world while interacting with the environment. To meet this challenge, we propose a biologically based cognitive architecture called Distributed Adaptive Control (DAC). DAC is organized in three different, tightly coupled, layers of control: reactive, adaptive and contextual. DAC based systems are self-contained and fully grounded, meaning that they autonomously generate representations of their primary sensory inputs, hence bootstrapping their behavior form simple to advance interactions. Following this approach, we have previously identified a novel environmentallymediated feedback loop in the organization of perception and behavior, i.e. behavioral feedback. Additionally, we could demonstrated that the dynamics of the memory structure of DAC, acquired during a foraging task, are equivalent to a Bayesian description of foraging. In this chapter we present DAC in a concise form and show how it is allowing us to extend the different subsystems to more biophysical detailed models. These further developments of the DAC architecture, not only allow to better understand the biological systems, but moreover advance DACs behavioral capabilities and generality.
Type of document:
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
Published in:
From Motor Learning to Interaction Learning in Robots. Springer; 2010. p. 15-41
Appears in Collections:
Instituto de Neurociencias



Creative Commons ???jsp.display-item.text9???