During the perception of human actions by robotic assistants, the robotic assistant needs to direct its computational and sensor resources to relevant parts of the human action. In previous work we have introduced HAMMER (Hierarchical Attentive Multiple Models for Execution and Recognition) (Demiris and Khadhouri, 2006), a computational architecture that forms multiple hypotheses with respect to what the demonstrated task is, and multiple predictions with respect to the forthcoming states of the human action. To confirm their predictions, the hypotheses request information from an attentional mechanism, which allocates the robot’s resources as a function of the saliency of the hypotheses. In this paper we augment the attention mechanism with a component that considers the content of the hypotheses’ requests, with respect to the content’s reliability, utility and cost. This content-based attention component further optimises the utilisation of the resources while remaining robust to noise. Such computational mechanisms are important for the development of robotic devices that will rapidly respond to human actions, either for imitation or collaboration purposes.
Da Lio, Mauro, Francesco Biral, Enrico Bertolazzi, Marco Galvani, Paolo Bosetti, David Windridge, Andrea Saroldi & Fabio Tango
2015. Artificial Co-Drivers as a Universal Enabling Technology for Future Intelligent Vehicles and Transportation Systems. IEEE Transactions on Intelligent Transportation Systems 16:1 ► pp. 244 ff.
Ognibene, Dimitri, Yan Wu, Kyuhwa Lee & Yiannis Demiris
2013. Hierarchies for Embodied Action Perception. In Computational and Robotic Models of the Hierarchical Organization of Behavior, ► pp. 81 ff.
Ognibene, Dimitri, Eris Chinellato, Miguel Sarabia & Yiannis Demiris
2012. Towards Contextual Action Recognition and Target Localization with Active Allocation of Attention. In Biomimetic and Biohybrid Systems [Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 7375], ► pp. 192 ff.
Ognibene, Dimitri, Eris Chinellato, Miguel Sarabia & Yiannis Demiris
2013. Contextual action recognition and target localization with an active allocation of attention on a humanoid robot. Bioinspiration & Biomimetics 8:3 ► pp. 035002 ff.
Lee, Kyuhwa & Yiannis Demiris
2011. 2011 IEEE International Conference on Development and Learning (ICDL), ► pp. 1 ff.
Butler, Simon & Yiannis Demiris
2010. Proceedings of the 2010 IEEE Conference on Computational Intelligence and Games, ► pp. 46 ff.
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