2019
DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2018.0031
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Fusing autonomy and sociality via embodied emergence and development of behaviour and cognition from fetal period

Abstract: Human-centred AI/Robotics are quickly becoming important. Their core claim is that AI systems or robots must be designed and work for the benefits of humans with no harm or uneasiness. It essentially requires the realization of autonomy, sociality and their fusion at all levels of system organization, even beyond programming or pre-training. The biologically inspired core principle of such a system is described as the emergence and development of embodied behaviour and cognition. The importance of embodiment, … Show more

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Cited by 22 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…As the contributions show, these biology-and psychology-inspired social robotics systems can lead to an impressive range of socially engaging behaviours, such as attention-grabbing emotional facial expressions [14], and even trust and theory-of-mind [13]. Crucially, these perspectives directly provide new insights for developmental psychology, for example into developmental mechanisms of social behaviour as well as clinical insights into autism spectrum condition [15,16]. Together, these contributions move away from scripted, fully top-down controlled robotic systems (as often seen in demonstrations of robotic systems), and toward fully autonomous social agents that are inspired by and build upon core concepts from human psychology and neuroscience.…”
Section: Development and Learning For Human -Robot Interactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…As the contributions show, these biology-and psychology-inspired social robotics systems can lead to an impressive range of socially engaging behaviours, such as attention-grabbing emotional facial expressions [14], and even trust and theory-of-mind [13]. Crucially, these perspectives directly provide new insights for developmental psychology, for example into developmental mechanisms of social behaviour as well as clinical insights into autism spectrum condition [15,16]. Together, these contributions move away from scripted, fully top-down controlled robotic systems (as often seen in demonstrations of robotic systems), and toward fully autonomous social agents that are inspired by and build upon core concepts from human psychology and neuroscience.…”
Section: Development and Learning For Human -Robot Interactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the first contribution of this section, Kuniyoshi [15] provides an integrative review of biology-inspired models of early development that are foundational for social interaction. In this framework, embodied cognition, the interaction between the agent and the environment, is crucial for the emergence of autonomous social behaviour and continuous development of these behaviours.…”
Section: Development and Learning For Human -Robot Interactionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[34][35][36][37]), theory of mind (e.g. [38][39][40][41]), mind perception (e.g. [42][43][44][45]), intention attribution (e.g.…”
Section: Interdisciplinary Tensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We are also thinking of using a vocoder with an audio speaker in place of the MFCCs in order to generate a real sound with a microphone to retrieve the sound information from another channel. That is, we think that having a robot that can speak and listen will help it learn by itself and from its social environment in a more ecological fashion through embodiment following a developmental process [ 5 7 , 83 ]. In this line, we also envision extending our framework to visual information for audio-speech recognition [ 16 , 17 , 84 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%