The Effects of Adaptive Control on Learning Directed Locomotion

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Abstract

This study is motivated by evolutionary robot systems where robot bodies and brains evolve simultaneously. In such systems robot 'birth' must be followed by 'infant learning' by a learning method that works for various morphologies evolution may produce. Here we address the task of directed locomotion in modular robots with controllers based on Central Pattern Generators. We present a bio-inspired adaptive feedback mechanism that uses a forward model and an inverse model that can be learned on-the-fly. We compare two versions (a simple and a sophisticated one) of this concept to a traditional (open-loop) controller using Bayesian optimization as a learning algorithm. The experimental results show that the sophisticated version outperforms the simple one and the traditional controller. It leads to a better performance and more robust controllers that better cope with noise.

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Diggelen, F. V., Babuska, R., & Eiben, A. E. (2020). The Effects of Adaptive Control on Learning Directed Locomotion. In 2020 IEEE Symposium Series on Computational Intelligence, SSCI 2020 (pp. 2117–2124). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. https://doi.org/10.1109/SSCI47803.2020.9308557

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