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Specialization of Perceptual Processes

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dc.creator Horswill, Ian
dc.date 2004-10-20T14:45:29Z
dc.date 2004-10-20T14:45:29Z
dc.date 1995-04-22
dc.date.accessioned 2013-10-09T02:46:50Z
dc.date.available 2013-10-09T02:46:50Z
dc.date.issued 2013-10-09
dc.identifier AITR-1511
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/6779
dc.identifier.uri http://koha.mediu.edu.my:8181/xmlui/handle/1721
dc.description In this report, I discuss the use of vision to support concrete, everyday activity. I will argue that a variety of interesting tasks can be solved using simple and inexpensive vision systems. I will provide a number of working examples in the form of a state-of-the-art mobile robot, Polly, which uses vision to give primitive tours of the seventh floor of the MIT AI Laboratory. By current standards, the robot has a broad behavioral repertoire and is both simple and inexpensive (the complete robot was built for less than $20,000 using commercial board-level components). The approach I will use will be to treat the structure of the agent's activity---its task and environment---as positive resources for the vision system designer. By performing a careful analysis of task and environment, the designer can determine a broad space of mechanisms which can perform the desired activity. My principal thesis is that for a broad range of activities, the space of applicable mechanisms will be broad enough to include a number mechanisms which are simple and economical. The simplest mechanisms that solve a given problem will typically be quite specialized to that problem. One thus worries that building simple vision systems will be require a great deal of {it ad-hoc} engineering that cannot be transferred to other problems. My second thesis is that specialized systems can be analyzed and understood in a principled manner, one that allows general lessons to be extracted from specialized systems. I will present a general approach to analyzing specialization through the use of transformations that provably improve performance. By demonstrating a sequence of transformations that derive a specialized system from a more general one, we can summarize the specialization of the former in a compact form that makes explicit the additional assumptions that it makes about its environment. The summary can be used to predict the performance of the system in novel environments. Individual transformations can be recycled in the design of future systems.
dc.format 194 p.
dc.format 1812135 bytes
dc.format 2032108 bytes
dc.format application/postscript
dc.format application/pdf
dc.language en_US
dc.relation AITR-1511
dc.subject AI
dc.subject MIT
dc.subject Artificial Intelligence
dc.subject robotics
dc.subject vision
dc.subject behavior-based systems
dc.subject agents
dc.subject real-time
dc.title Specialization of Perceptual Processes


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