|
Call for Papers Also available in PostScript, PDF, and Word .DOC. Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems August 10-11, 2002 Edinburgh, Scotland (held in conjunction with SAB 2002) |
Deadline for Submission of Papers: 28 February 2002
Extended Paper Deadline: 11 March 2002
Deadline for Submission of Posters: 11 April 2002
This workshop focuses on the mutual rapprochement of developmental psychology and robotics, and on three properties of natural and artificial systems:
(a) the embodiment of the system;
(b) its situatedness in a physical and social environment;
(c) a prolonged epigenetic developmental process through which increasingly more complex cognitive structures emerge in the system as a result of interactions with the physical and social environment.
In addition to basic research goals in cognitive science, epigenetic robotics research includes practical goals of: (1) enabling robots and other artificial systems to better adapt to their environments, and to better adapt to changes in these environments, and (2) easing the problem of programming robots—by programming the robots to develop skills for any particular environment instead of programming robots for specific environments.
Subject Areas include, but are not limited to:
· The role of motivation, emotions, and value systems in development;
· The development of: concepts, consciousness and self-awareness, emotion, imitation, intentionality, intersubjectivity, joint attention, learning, motivation, non-verbal and verbal communication, self, sensorimotor schemata, shared meaning and symbolic reference, social learning, social relationships, social understanding (“mind reading”, “theory of mind”), value systems;
· Interaction between innate structure, ongoing developing structure, and experience;
· Related issues in algorithms, robotics, simulated robots, and embodied systems;
· Strong AI (true intelligence and autonomy) versus weak AI;
· Related issues from human and nonhuman empirical studies.
For a summary of the papers from the first workshop see Zlatev and Balkenius (2001).
Communications Research Laboratory, Japan
The workshop is being held in Edinburgh, Scotland, at the University of Edinburgh. The workshop follows the 2002 Simulation of Adaptive Behavior Conference (SAB 2002).
Luc Steels (AI Laboratory, VUB, Brussels; Sony Computer Science Lab, Paris)
Colwyn Trevarthen (Dept. of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, UK)
John Weng (Computer Science and Engineering, Michigan State U., USA)
Papers not exceeding eight (8) pages should be submitted electronically (PDF or Postscript) as attachment files to Yiannis Demiris (y.demiris@ic.ac.uk). Extended abstracts (maximum two pages) can also be submitted, and will be presented as posters (abstracts should also be submitted in PDF or Postscript as attachments to y.demiris@ic.ac.uk). Further instructions to authors will be posted on the workshop home page: http://www.epigenetic-robotics.org
February 28, 2002: Deadline for submission of papers
March 11, 2002: Extended deadline for papers
April 11, 2002: Deadline for Posters
April 19, 2002: Notification of acceptance for papers
May 11, 2002: Notification of acceptance for posters
June 5, 2002: Deadline for camera ready-papers & posters
August 10-11, 2002: Workshop
Christian Balkenius (Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Yiannis Demiris (Intelligent and Interactive Systems, Imperial College, UK)
Hideki Kozima (Communications Research Laboratory, Japan)
Yuval Marom (Divison of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, UK)
Christopher Prince (Computer
Science, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA)
Christian Balkenius (Cognitive Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Luc Berthouze (Neuroscience Research Institute, AIST, Japan)
Aude Billard (Computer Science
Department, USC, USA)
Cynthia Breazeal (Media Lab, MIT, USA)
Kerstin Dautenhahn (Adaptive Systems Research Group, University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Yiannis Demiris (Intelligent and Interactive Systems, Imperial College, UK)
Peter Gärdenfors (Cognitive
Science, Lund University, Sweden)
Philippe Gaussier (Université de Cergy-Pontoise & ENSEA, France)
Hideki Kozima (Communications Research Laboratory, Japan)
Yuval Marom (Divison of Informatics, University of Edinburgh, UK)
Chrystopher Nehaniv (Adaptive Systems Research
Group, University of Hertfordshire, U.K.)
Jacqueline Nadel (CNRS, France)
Christopher Prince (Computer
Science, University of Minnesota Duluth, USA)
Rolf Pfeifer (AI Lab, University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Deb Roy (Media Laboratory, MIT,
USA)
Stefan Schaal (Computer Science Department, USC, USA)
Georgi Stojanov (Computer Science Institute,
SS Cyril and Methodius University, Macedonia)
Gert Westermann (CBCD, Birkberk, University of London, UK)
Jordan Zlatev (Linguistics, Lund University, Sweden)
Papers and poster abstracts will be published in a proceedings, and archived at CogPrints. Authors of selected papers will be offered the opportunity to prepare extended versions of their papers for submission to a dedicated issue of the journal Adaptive Behavior.
Zlatev, J. & Balkenius, C. (2001). Introduction: Why “epigenetic robotics”? Proceedings of the First International Workshop on Epigenetic Robotics: Modeling Cognitive Development in Robotic Systems (pp. 1-4). Lund University Cognitive Studies, Volume 85. Available at:
http://www.lucs.lu.se/Epigenetic-robotics/Papers/Zlatev.Balkenius.2001.pdf