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Studying cerebral organization through embodied artificial evolution

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Title: Studying cerebral organization through embodied artificial evolution


1
Studying cerebral organization throughembodied
artificial evolution
  • Joris Janssen, Twan Goosen,
  • Ida Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and Pim Haselager

1st NSVKI Student Conference Nijmegen, 22 June
2007
2
Overview
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionOverview
  • Introduction
  • Research questions
  • Experimental Setup
  • Robot Design
  • Task Ecological Niche
  • Control structure Evolution
  • Results
  • Fitness
  • Clustering
  • Symmetry
  • Fitness II
  • Discussion
  • Hemispheres
  • Symmetry vs. Asymmetry

3
Introduction
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionIntroduction
  • Cerebral lateralization left and right part of
    human brain not the same
  • Cerebral lateralization has had a lot of
    attention
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Neuropsychology
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Focus on
  • What is lateralized?
  • Not on origin (why?) of lateralization

4
Research questions
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResearch questions
  • Two questions
  • Why do we possess two hemispheres?
  • Why are some of the functions of the brain
    organized symmetrically and others
    asymmetrically?
  • gtgt actually two questions
  • - why some asymmetrically?
  • - why some symmetrically?

5
Hypotheses
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResearch questions
  • Two hemispheres
  • Back-up in event of injury
  • gtgt unlikely brain not that plastic
  • Related to symmetrical body plan

6
Hypotheses
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResearch questions
  • Asymmetrical functions less neural space

symmetrical
asymmetrical
7
Hypotheses
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResearch questions
  • Why then symmetrical functions?
  • Found in all kinds of species
  • Evolutionary advantage less information needs to
    be integrated
  • Likely to develop easier/faster

8
Summary
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResearch questions
  • Two hemispheres
  • Related to origin of symmetrical body plan
  • Asymmetrically organized functions
  • Require less neural space
  • Symmetrically organized functions
  • Easier/faster to develop

9
Overview
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionOverview
  • Introduction
  • Research questions
  • Experimental Setup
  • Robot Design
  • Task Ecological Niche
  • Control structure Evolution
  • Results
  • Fitness
  • Clustering
  • Symmetry
  • Fitness II
  • Discussion
  • Hemispheres
  • Symmetry vs. Asymmetry

10
Experimental setup
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionExperimental setup
  • Needs
  • Robots (symmetrical and asymmetrical)
  • Task and environment
  • Control structure
  • Developmental mechanism evolution

11
Robot design
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionRobot design
symmetrical
asymmetrical
12
Task Ecological niche
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionTask Ecological niche
  • Move around environment
  • Cover as much distance as possible
  • Avoid bumping into walls

13
Control structure
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionControl structure Evolution
14
Evolution
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolution Control structure
Evolution
  • Evolution used to modify weights and biases
  • First generation starts with random weights and
    biases
  • Genetic algorithm
  • Test individuals
  • Select top 10 (out of 20)
  • Generate 10 new ones out of 10 old ones (by
    mutating weights)

15
Overview
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionOverview
  • Introduction
  • Research questions
  • Experimental Setup
  • Robot Design
  • Task Ecological Niche
  • Control structure Evolution
  • Results
  • Fitness
  • Clustering
  • Symmetry
  • Fitness II
  • Discussion
  • Hemispheres
  • Symmetry vs. Asymmetry

16
Fitness of symmetrical group
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionFitness
Group with symmetrical body plan
17
Fitness of asymmetrical group
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionFitness
Group with asymmetrical body plan
18
Clustering
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionClustering
Edelman Tononi
19
Clustering results
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionClustering
Analysis of variance over last 50 generations p
lt 0.001 R2 0.135
20
Symmetry
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionSymmetry
Symmetrical processing
Asymmetrical processing
21
Asymmetry
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionSymmetry
Analysis of variance over last 50 generations p
lt 0.001 R2 0.525
22
Fitness II
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionFitness
23
Summary
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionResults
  • Symmetrical body plan results in more symmetrical
    control structure
  • More clustering in symmetrical group
  • Asymmetrical group performs better in the end
  • Symmetrical group develops faster in the beginning

24
Overview
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionOverview
  • Introduction
  • Research questions
  • Experimental Setup
  • Robot Design
  • Task Ecological Niche
  • Control structure Evolution
  • Results
  • Fitness
  • Clustering
  • Symmetry
  • Fitness II
  • Discussion
  • Hemispheres
  • Symmetry vs. Asymmetry

25
Hemispheres
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionDiscussion
  • Hypothesis symmetrical body plan results in two
    hemispheres
  • Results Symmetrical body plan results in two
    clusters

26
Asymmetry
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionDiscussion
  • Hypothesis asymmetrical better performance since
    better use of neural space
  • Results asymmetrical group performs better

27
Symmetry
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionDiscussion
  • Hypothesis symmetry less complex to develop
  • Results symmetry develops faster

28
Causality?
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionDiscussion
body plan structure
performance
control structure
control structure
body plan structure
performance
29
Validity?
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionDiscussion
  • Simulated model no valid equivalent of natural
    system
  • But this research can
  • .provide supporting evidence
  • .lead to new ideas and insights

30
Take home message
Janssen, Goosen, Sprinkhuizen-Kuyper, and
Haselager
Studying cerebral organization through embodied
artificial evolutionTake home message
Use robots as cognitive tools!
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