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Rat-brained robot thinks like the real thing
* 17:08 04 July 2007
* NewScientist.com news service
* Duncan Graham-Rowe
A robot controlled by a simulated rat brain has proved itself to be a
remarkable mimic of rodent behaviour in series of classic animal
experiments.
The robot's biologically-inspired control software uses a functional model
of "place cells". These are neurons in an area of the brain called the
hippocampus that help real rats to map their environment. They fire when
an animal is in a familiar location.
Alfredo Weitzenfeld, a roboticist at the ITAM technical institute in
Mexico City, carried out the work by reprogramming an AIBO robot dog, made
by Japanese firm Sony, with the rat-inspired control software.
When placed inside a maze, the robot learnt to navigate towards a "reward"
in a remarkably similar way to real rodents, using landmarks to explore.
Weitzenfeld found that the robot could recognise places it had already
visited, distinguish between locations that looked alike, and figure out
roughly where it was when placed in an unfamiliar part of a maze, after
just a single training session.
"Our work is unique in that we are trying to reproduce with robots actual
experiments carried out on rats," Weitzenfeld told New Scientist.
The robot's tasks were set up to replicate Richard Morris' classic water
maze experiments from the 1980s. These were designed to shed light on how
spatial problems are solved neurologically.
Weitzenfeld is also working closely with neuroscientists who are
experimenting with real rats. "Our goal is to extend our current models by
testing new hypotheses in robots," he says, "and by performing
corresponding new experiments with real rats that may lead to further
understandings in rat spatial memory and learning."
One of the challenges in robot navigation is to enable machines to create
maps of their surrounding environment, while working out their location at
the same time a challenge known as simultaneous localisation and mapping
or SLAM.
"We believe this work will also inspire, in due time, new robotic
approaches to SLAM and learning in robots," Weitzenfeld adds.
Chris Melhuish, director of the Bristol Robotics Laboratory says that,
while other researchers have performed similar experiments in simulation,
these are the first tests to be carried in real environments.
This could make a big difference when it comes to making more robust
control software for robots, he says.
Weitzenfeld agrees. "This increases the complexity, but gives us a better
understanding of the true complexity found in real and artificial
systems," he says.
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