Evolution of spiking neural controllers for autonomous vision-based robots (2001)
| Venue: | in: T. Gomi (Ed.), Evolutionary Robotics IV |
| Citations: | 41 - 10 self |
BibTeX
@INPROCEEDINGS{Floreano01evolutionof,
author = {Dario Floreano and Claudio Mattiussi},
title = {Evolution of spiking neural controllers for autonomous vision-based robots},
booktitle = {in: T. Gomi (Ed.), Evolutionary Robotics IV},
year = {2001},
publisher = {Springer-Verlag}
}
Years of Citing Articles
OpenURL
Abstract
Abstract. We describe a set of preliminary experiments to evolve spiking neural controllers for a vision-based mobile robot. All the evolutionary experiments are carried out on physical robots without human intervention. After discussing how to implement and interface these neurons with a physical robot, we show that evolution finds relatively quickly functional spiking controllers capable of navigating in irregularly textured environments without hitting obstacles using a very simple genetic encoding and fitness function. Neuroethological analysis of the network activity let us understand the functioning of evolved controllers and tell the relative importance of single neurons independently of their observed firing rate. Finally, a number of systematic lesion experiments indicate that evolved spiking controllers are very robust to synaptic strength decay that typically occurs in hardware implementations of spiking circuits. 1 Spiking Neural Circuits The great majority of biological neurons communicate by sending pulses along







