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The Cog project: Building a humanoid robot (1999)

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by Rodney A. Brooks , Cynthia Breazeal , Matthew Marjanović , Brian Scassellati , Matthew M. Williamson
Venue:Lecture Notes in Computer Science
Citations:197 - 7 self
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BibTeX

@INPROCEEDINGS{Brooks99thecog,
    author = {Rodney A. Brooks and Cynthia Breazeal and Matthew Marjanović and Brian Scassellati and Matthew M. Williamson},
    title = {The Cog project: Building a humanoid robot},
    booktitle = {Lecture Notes in Computer Science},
    year = {1999},
    pages = {52--87},
    publisher = {Springer-Verlag}
}

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Abstract

Abstract. To explore issues of developmental structure, physical embodiment, integration of multiple sensory and motor systems, and social interaction, we have constructed an upper-torso humanoid robot called Cog. The robot has twenty-one degrees of freedom and a variety of sensory systems, including visual, auditory, vestibular, kinesthetic, and tactile senses. This chapter gives a background on the methodology that we have used in our investigations, highlights the research issues that have been raised during this project, and provides a summary of both the current state of the project and our long-term goals. We report on a variety of implemented visual-motor routines (smooth-pursuit tracking, saccades, binocular vergence, and vestibular-ocular and opto-kinetic reflexes), orientation behaviors, motor control techniques, and social behaviors (pointing to a visual target, recognizing joint attention through face and eye finding, imitation of head nods, and regulating interaction through expressive feedback). We further outline a number of areas for future research that will be necessary to build a complete embodied system. 1

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