2015 IEEE-RAS 15th International Conference on Humanoid Robots (Humanoids) 2015
DOI: 10.1109/humanoids.2015.7363512
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A visual tracking model implemented on the iCub robot as a use case for a novel neurorobotic toolkit integrating brain and physics simulation

Abstract: Developing neuro-inspired computing paradigms that mimic nervous system function is an emerging field of research that fosters our model understanding of the biological system and targets technical applications in artificial systems. The computational power of simulated brain circuits makes them a very promising tool for the development for brain-controlled robots. Early phases of robotic controllers development make extensive use of simulators as they are easy, fast and cheap tools. In order to develop roboti… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…The overall control scheme can be observed in Figure 14A. This model improves a previously designed visual tracking controller implemented using the same Brain Model of the experiment described in Section 5.1 (Vannucci et al, 2015). A model of retinal red–green opponency was used as a robot to neuron transfer function.…”
Section: Use Cases For the Neurorobotics Platformmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The overall control scheme can be observed in Figure 14A. This model improves a previously designed visual tracking controller implemented using the same Brain Model of the experiment described in Section 5.1 (Vannucci et al, 2015). A model of retinal red–green opponency was used as a robot to neuron transfer function.…”
Section: Use Cases For the Neurorobotics Platformmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…All the simulations were run on the Neurorobotics Platform and implemented through its utilities, which has been shown capable of implementing robotic control loops (Vannucci et al, 2015). The controller was implemented using a domain-specific language that eases the development of robotic controllers, and that is part of the Neurorobotics Platform simulation engine (Hinkel et al, 2017).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Indeed, some techniques have already benefited robotics such as successful simulations where robots are controlled using biologically plausible cerebellar models [12], [13], [14], virtual experiments with a simulated robot using customized brain models, e.g. the Neurorobotics Platform (NRP) [15], bio-inspired abstraction strategies of robotic dynamics and kinematics [16], and adaptive control schemes for non-linear systems [17], [18], [19]. Besides, realistic cerebellar SNN implementations on a computer [20], e.g.…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%