Emotional metacontrol of attention: Top-down modulation of sensorimotor processes in a robotic visual search task

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Abstract

Emotions play a significant role in internal regulatory processes. In this paper, we advocate four key ideas. First, novelty detection can be grounded in the sensorimotor experience and allow higher order appraisal. Second, cognitive processes, such as those involved in self-assessment, influence emotional states by eliciting affects like boredom and frustration. Third, emotional processes such as those triggered by self-assessment influence attentional processes. Last, close emotion-cognition interactions implement an efficient feedback loop for the purpose of top-down behavior regulation. The latter is what we call ‘Emotional Metacontrol’. We introduce a model based on artificial neural networks. This architecture is used to control a robotic system in a visual search task. The emotional metacontrol intervenes to bias the robot visual attention during active object recognition. Through a behavioral and statistical analysis, we show that this mechanism increases the robot performance and fosters the exploratory behavior to avoid deadlocks.

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APA

Belkaid, M., Cuperlier, N., & Gaussier, P. (2017). Emotional metacontrol of attention: Top-down modulation of sensorimotor processes in a robotic visual search task. PLoS ONE, 12(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184960

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