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      Goal Babbling Permits Direct Learning of Inverse Kinematics

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          Development as a dynamic system

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            The development of embodied cognition: six lessons from babies.

            The embodiment hypothesis is the idea that intelligence emerges in the interaction of an agent with an environment and as a result of sensorimotor activity. We offer six lessons for developing embodied intelligent agents suggested by research in developmental psychology. We argue that starting as a baby grounded in a physical, social, and linguistic world is crucial to the development of the flexible and inventive intelligence that characterizes humankind.
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              Explaining Facial Imitation: A Theoretical Model.

              A long-standing puzzle in developmental psychology is how infants imitate gestures they cannot see themselves perform (facial gestures). Two critical issues are: (a) the metric infants use to detect cross-modal equivalences in human acts and (b) the process by which they correct their imitative errors. We address these issues in a detailed model of the mechanisms underlying facial imitation. The model can be extended to encompass other types of imitation. The model capitalizes on three new theoretical concepts. First, organ identification is the means by which infants relate parts of their own bodies to corresponding ones of the adult's. Second, body babbling (infants' movement practice gained through self-generated activity) provides experience mapping movements to the resulting body configurations. Third, organ relations provide the metric by which infant and adult acts are perceived in commensurate terms. In imitating, infants attempt to match the organ relations they see exhibited by the adults with those they feel themselves make. We show how development restructures the meaning and function of early imitation. We argue that important aspects of later social cognition are rooted in the initial cross-modal equivalence between self and other found in newborns.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                IEEE Transactions on Autonomous Mental Development
                IEEE Trans. Auton. Mental Dev.
                Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
                1943-0604
                1943-0612
                September 2010
                September 2010
                : 2
                : 3
                : 216-229
                Article
                10.1109/TAMD.2010.2062511
                08a57fd6-f732-4cfb-b3fc-97d362d4b397
                © 2010
                History

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