Imitation and Mirror Systems in Robots through Deep Modality Blending Networks
This work addresses the challenge of action understanding and imitation in robotics, offering a computational model for mirror neuron-like capabilities, but it appears incremental as it builds on existing deep learning approaches with a novel blending scheme.
The paper tackles the problem of enabling robots to understand and imitate actions by learning from their own interaction experience, proposing a deep modality blending network (DMBN) that creates a common latent space from multi-modal signals, which facilitates action recognition and generates trajectories for anatomical or effect-based imitation without accumulating prediction errors.
Learning to interact with the environment not only empowers the agent with manipulation capability but also generates information to facilitate building of action understanding and imitation capabilities. This seems to be a strategy adopted by biological systems, in particular primates, as evidenced by the existence of mirror neurons that seem to be involved in multi-modal action understanding. How to benefit from the interaction experience of the robots to enable understanding actions and goals of other agents is still a challenging question. In this study, we propose a novel method, deep modality blending networks (DMBN), that creates a common latent space from multi-modal experience of a robot by blending multi-modal signals with a stochastic weighting mechanism. We show for the first time that deep learning, when combined with a novel modality blending scheme, can facilitate action recognition and produce structures to sustain anatomical and effect-based imitation capabilities. Our proposed system, can be conditioned on any desired sensory/motor value at any time-step, and can generate a complete multi-modal trajectory consistent with the desired conditioning in parallel avoiding accumulation of prediction errors. We further showed that given desired images from different perspectives, i.e. images generated by the observation of other robots placed on different sides of the table, our system could generate image and joint angle sequences that correspond to either anatomical or effect based imitation behavior. Overall, the proposed DMBN architecture not only serves as a computational model for sustaining mirror neuron-like capabilities, but also stands as a powerful machine learning architecture for high-dimensional multi-modal temporal data with robust retrieval capabilities operating with partial information in one or multiple modalities.