In many joint-action scenarios, humans and robots have to coordinate their movements to accomplish a given shared task. Examples include lifting an object together, sawing a wood log, transferring objects from a point to another. While dyadic coordination between a human and a robot has been studied in previous investigations, the multi-agent scenario in which a robot has to be integrated into a human group still remains a less explored field of research. In this paper we discuss how to synthesise an artificial agent, driven by a control architecture based on deep reinforcement learning, able to coordinate its motion in human ensembles. As a paradigmatic coordination task we take a group version of the so called mirror game from the human movement literature.

Deep learning control of artificial avatars in group coordination tasks

Liuzza D.;
2019-01-01

Abstract

In many joint-action scenarios, humans and robots have to coordinate their movements to accomplish a given shared task. Examples include lifting an object together, sawing a wood log, transferring objects from a point to another. While dyadic coordination between a human and a robot has been studied in previous investigations, the multi-agent scenario in which a robot has to be integrated into a human group still remains a less explored field of research. In this paper we discuss how to synthesise an artificial agent, driven by a control architecture based on deep reinforcement learning, able to coordinate its motion in human ensembles. As a paradigmatic coordination task we take a group version of the so called mirror game from the human movement literature.
2019
978-1-7281-4569-3
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12079/54111
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