Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding

People exhibit a robust ability to understand the actions of others around them. In this work, we identify two biologically inspired mechanisms that we hypothesize to be central in the function of action understanding. The first module is a contextual predictor of the observed action, given the goal...

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Main Authors: Alkurdi Laith, Busch Christian, Peer Angelika
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2018-03-01
Series:Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0003
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spelling doaj-f24c97879a424ff0849d5b6698935a732021-10-02T19:03:30ZengDe GruyterPaladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics2081-48362018-03-0191195910.1515/pjbr-2018-0003pjbr-2018-0003Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understandingAlkurdi Laith0Busch Christian1Peer Angelika2Chair of Automatic Control Engineering, Department of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, Technische Universität München, München, GermanyChair of Automatic Control Engineering, Department of Electrical, Electronic and Computer Engineering, Technische Universität München, München, GermanyBristol Robotics Laboratory, Faculty of Environment and Technology, Department of Engineering Design and Mathematics, University of the West of England, Bristol, UKPeople exhibit a robust ability to understand the actions of others around them. In this work, we identify two biologically inspired mechanisms that we hypothesize to be central in the function of action understanding. The first module is a contextual predictor of the observed action, given the goal-directed movement towards objects, and the actions that are allowed to be performed on the object. The second module is a kinematic trajectory parser that validates the previous prediction against a set of learned templates.We model both mechanisms and link them to the environment using the cognitive framework of Dynamic Field Theory and present our first steps into integrating the aforementioned modules into a consistent framework for the purpose of action understanding. The two modules and the combined architecture as awhole are experimentally validated using a recording of an actor performing a series of intentional actions testing the ability of the architecture to understand context and parse actions dynamically. Our initial qualitative results show that action understanding benefits from the combination of the two modules, while any module alone would be insufficient to resolve ambiguity in the perceived actions.https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0003dynamic field theoryaction understandingembodied embedded cognitionaffordance theorytheory of mind
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alkurdi Laith
Busch Christian
Peer Angelika
spellingShingle Alkurdi Laith
Busch Christian
Peer Angelika
Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
dynamic field theory
action understanding
embodied embedded cognition
affordance theory
theory of mind
author_facet Alkurdi Laith
Busch Christian
Peer Angelika
author_sort Alkurdi Laith
title Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
title_short Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
title_full Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
title_fullStr Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
title_sort dynamic contextualization and comparison as the basis of biologically inspired action understanding
publisher De Gruyter
series Paladyn: Journal of Behavioral Robotics
issn 2081-4836
publishDate 2018-03-01
description People exhibit a robust ability to understand the actions of others around them. In this work, we identify two biologically inspired mechanisms that we hypothesize to be central in the function of action understanding. The first module is a contextual predictor of the observed action, given the goal-directed movement towards objects, and the actions that are allowed to be performed on the object. The second module is a kinematic trajectory parser that validates the previous prediction against a set of learned templates.We model both mechanisms and link them to the environment using the cognitive framework of Dynamic Field Theory and present our first steps into integrating the aforementioned modules into a consistent framework for the purpose of action understanding. The two modules and the combined architecture as awhole are experimentally validated using a recording of an actor performing a series of intentional actions testing the ability of the architecture to understand context and parse actions dynamically. Our initial qualitative results show that action understanding benefits from the combination of the two modules, while any module alone would be insufficient to resolve ambiguity in the perceived actions.
topic dynamic field theory
action understanding
embodied embedded cognition
affordance theory
theory of mind
url https://doi.org/10.1515/pjbr-2018-0003
work_keys_str_mv AT alkurdilaith dynamiccontextualizationandcomparisonasthebasisofbiologicallyinspiredactionunderstanding
AT buschchristian dynamiccontextualizationandcomparisonasthebasisofbiologicallyinspiredactionunderstanding
AT peerangelika dynamiccontextualizationandcomparisonasthebasisofbiologicallyinspiredactionunderstanding
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