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Artificial Life

Quarterly (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall)
125 pp. per issue, 7 x 10,
illustrated
Founded: 1993
ISSN 1064-5462
E-ISSN 1530-9185
2008 ISI Impact Factor: 1.164  

Artificial Life

Winter-Spring 2005, Vol. 11, No. 1-2, Pages 31-62
Posted Online March 11, 2006.
(doi:10.1162/1064546053278955)
© 2005 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Learning From and About Others: Towards Using Imitation to Bootstrap the Social Understanding of Others by Robots

Cynthia Breazeal

MIT Media Lab, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, NE18, 5th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142

Daphna Buchsbaum

MIT Media Lab, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, NE18, 5th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142

Jesse Gray

MIT Media Lab, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, NE18, 5th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142

David Gatenby

MIT Media Lab, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, NE18, 5th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142

Bruce Blumberg

MIT Media Lab, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, NE18, 5th floor, Cambridge, MA 02142

PDF (4,205.555 KB) PDF Plus (1,728.116 KB)

We want to build robots capable of rich social interactions with humans, including natural communication and cooperation. This work explores how imitation as a social learning and teaching process may be applied to building socially intelligent robots, and summarizes our progress toward building a robot capable of learning how to imitate facial expressions from simple imitative games played with a human, using biologically inspired mechanisms. It is possible for the robot to bootstrap from this imitative ability to infer the affective reaction of the human with whom it interacts and then use this affective assessment to guide its subsequent behavior. Our approach is heavily influenced by the ways human infants learn to communicate with their caregivers and come to understand the actions and expressive behavior of others in intentional and motivational terms. Specifically, our approach is guided by the hypothesis that imitative interactions between infant and caregiver, starting with facial mimicry, are a significant stepping-stone to developing appropriate social behavior, to predicting others' actions, and ultimately to understanding people as social beings.

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