Connecting Brains to Robots: An Artificial Body for Studying the Computational Properties of Neural Tissues

Author:

Reger Bernard D.1,Fleming Karen M.1,Sanguineti Vittorio2,Alford Simon3,Mussa-Ivaldi Ferdinando A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiology Northwestern University Medical School Chicago, IL 60611.

2. Dipartimento di Informatica Sistemistica e Telematica Università di Genova, Italy

3. Department of Biological Sciences University of Illinois at Chicago Chicago, IL 60607

Abstract

We have created a hybrid neuro-robotic system that establishes two-way communication between the brain of a lamprey and a small mobile robot. The purpose of this system is to offer a new paradigm for investigating the behavioral, computational, and neurobiological mechanisms of sensory-motor learning in a unified context. The mobile robot acts as an artificial body that delivers sensory information to the neural tissue and receives command signals from it. The sensory information encodes the intensity of light generated by a fixed source. The closed-loop interaction between brain and robot generates autonomous behaviors whose features are strictly related to the structure and operation of the neural preparation. We provide a detailed description of the hybrid system, and we present experimental findings on its performance. In particular, we found (a) that the hybrid system generates stable behaviors, (b) that different preparations display different but systematic responses to the presentation of an optical stimulus, and (c) that alteration of the sensory input leads to short- and long-term adaptive changes in the robot responses. The comparison of the behaviors generated by the lamprey's brain stem with the behaviors generated by network models of the same neural system provides us with a new tool for investigating the computational properties of synaptic plasticity.

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Artificial Intelligence,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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