Reservoir Computing (RC) is increasingly being used as a conceptually simple yet powerful method for using the temporal processing of recurrent neural networks (RNN). However, because fundamental insight in the exact functionality of the reservoir is as yet still lacking, in practice there is still a lot of manual parameter tweaking or brute-force searching involved in optimizing these systems. In this contribution we aim to enhance the insights into reservoir operation, by experimentally studying the interplay of the two crucial reservoir properties, memory and non-linear mapping. For this, we introduce a novel metric which measures the deviation of the reservoir from a linear regime and use it to define different regions of dynamical behaviour. Next, we study the relationship of two important reservoir parameters, input scaling and spectral radius, on two properties of an artificial task, namely memory and non- linearity
Abstract. Reservoir Computing (RC) uses a randomly created recurrent neural network where only a linear readout layer is trained. In this work, RC is used for detecting complex events in autonomous robot navigation. This can be extended to robot localization based solely on sensory information. The robot thus builds an implicit map of the environment without the use of odometry data. These techniques are demonstrated in simulation on several complex and even dynamic environments.
This paper presents a novel design of face tracking algorithm and visual state estimation for a mobile robot face tracking interaction control system. The advantage of this design is that it can track a user's face under several external uncertainties and estimate the system state without the knowledge about target's 3D motion-model information. This feature is helpful for the development of a real-time visual tracking control system. In order to overcome the change in skin color due to light variation, a real-time face tracking algorithm is proposed based on an adaptive skin color search method. Moreover, in order to increase the robustness against colored observation noise, a new visual state estimator is designed by combining a Kalman filter with an echo state network-based self-tuning algorithm. The performance of this estimator design has been evaluated using computer simulation. Several experiments on a mobile robot validate the proposed control system.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.