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Published September 2011 | public
Book Section - Chapter

Bootstrapping sensorimotor cascades: a group-theoretic perspective

Abstract

The bootstrapping problem consists in designing agents that learn a model of themselves and the world, and utilize it to achieve useful tasks. It is different from other learning problems as the agent starts with uninterpreted observations and commands, and with minimal prior information about the world. in this paper, we give a mathematical formalization of this aspect of the problem. We argue that the vague constrain of having "no prior information" can be recast as a precise algebraic condition on the agent: that its behavior is invariant to particular classes of nuisances on the world, which we show can be well represented by actions of groups (diffeomorphisms, permutations, linear transformations) on observations and commans. We then introduce the class of bilinear gradient dynamics sensors (BGDS) as a candidate for learning generic robotic sensorimotor cascades. We show how framing the problem as rejection of group nuisances allows a compact and modular analysis of typical preprocessing stages, such as learning the topology of the sensors. We demonstrate learning and using such models on real-word range-finder and camera date from publicly available datasets.

Additional Information

© 2011 IEEE. Date of Current Version: 05 December 2011.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
January 13, 2024