Sciweavers

BC
2004

Coevolution of active vision and feature selection

13 years 4 months ago
Coevolution of active vision and feature selection
We show that complex visual tasks, such as position- and size-invariant shape recognition and navigation in the environment, can be tackled with simple architectures generated by a coevolutionary process of active vision and feature selection. Behavioral machines equipped with primitive vision systems and direct pathways between visual and motor neurons are evolved while they freely interact with their environments. We describe the application of this methodology in three sets of experiments, namely, shape discrimination, car driving, and robot navigation. We show that these systems develop sensitivity to a number of oriented, retinotopic, visual-feature-oriented edges, corners, height, and a behavioral repertoire to locate, bring, and keep these features in sensitive regions of the vision system, resembling strategies observed in simple insects. 1 Active vision and feature selection In this paper we show that the computational complexity of visual processing can be greatly simplified ...
Dario Floreano, Toshifumi Kato, Davide Marocco, Er
Added 16 Dec 2010
Updated 16 Dec 2010
Type Journal
Year 2004
Where BC
Authors Dario Floreano, Toshifumi Kato, Davide Marocco, Eric Sauser
Comments (0)