LGCVROAug 5, 2020

A robot that counts like a child: a developmental model of counting and pointing

arXiv:2008.02366v24 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of understanding the interaction between embodiment and numerical cognition for developmental robotics and cognitive science.

The paper introduces a neuro-robotics model that enables a robot to count real items and point to them, investigating how pointing influences counting and showing results similar to human studies.

In this paper, a novel neuro-robotics model capable of counting real items is introduced. The model allows us to investigate the interaction between embodiment and numerical cognition. This is composed of a deep neural network capable of image processing and sequential tasks performance, and a robotic platform providing the embodiment - the iCub humanoid robot. The network is trained using images from the robot's cameras and proprioceptive signals from its joints. The trained model is able to count a set of items and at the same time points to them. We investigate the influence of pointing on the counting process and compare our results with those from studies with children. Several training approaches are presented in this paper all of them uses pre-training routine allowing the network to gain the ability of pointing and number recitation (from 1 to 10) prior to counting training. The impact of the counted set size and distance to the objects are investigated. The obtained results on counting performance show similarities with those from human studies.

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