Litcius/Paper detail

Animal-in-the-Loop: Using Interactive Robotic Conspecifics to Study Social Behavior in Animal Groups

Tim Landgraf, Gregor H. W. Gebhardt, David Bierbach, Paweł Romańczuk, Lea Musiolek, Verena V. Hafner, Jens Krause

2020Annual Review of Control Robotics and Autonomous Systems39 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Biomimetic robots that replace living social interaction partners can help elucidate the underlying interaction rules in animal groups. Our review focuses on the use of interactive robots that respond dynamically to animal behavior as part of a closed control loop. We discuss the most influential works to date and how they have contributed to our understanding of animal sociality. Technological advances permit the use of robots that can adapt to the situations they face and the conspecifics they encounter, or robots that learn to optimize their social performance from a set of experiences. We discuss how adaptation and learning may provide novel insights into group sociobiology and describe the technical challenges associatedwith these types of interactive robots. This interdisciplinary field provides a rich set of problems to be tackled by roboticists, machine learning engineers, and control theorists. By cultivating smarter robots, we can usher in an era of more nuanced exploration of animal behavior.

Topics & Concepts

SocialityRobotSet (abstract data type)SociobiologyHuman–computer interactionAdaptation (eye)Social animalField (mathematics)Animal behaviorComputer scienceCognitive scienceArtificial intelligencePsychologySociologyEcologyBiologyNeuroscienceProgramming languageMathematicsAnthropologyZoologyPure mathematicsSpecies Distribution and Climate ChangeEvolutionary Game Theory and CooperationAnimal Behavior and Reproduction