Authors
Roy De Kleijn, George Kachergis, Bernhard Hommel
Publication date
2014/3/17
Source
Frontiers in Neurorobotics
Volume
8
Pages
13
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Description
Robots are increasingly capable of performing everyday human activities such as cooking, cleaning, and doing the laundry. This requires the real-time planning and execution of complex, temporally extended sequential actions under high degrees of uncertainty, which provides many challenges to traditional approaches to robot action control. We argue that important lessons in this respect can be learned from research on human action control. We provide a brief overview of available psychological insights into this issue and focus on four principles that we think could be particularly beneficial for robot control: the integration of symbolic and subsymbolic planning of action sequences, the integration of feedforward and feedback control, the clustering of complex actions into subcomponents, and the contextualization of action-control structures through goal representations.
Total citations
201420152016201720182019202020212022202320244122112531
Scholar articles
R De Kleijn, G Kachergis, B Hommel - Frontiers in Neurorobotics, 2014