[alife] IEEE - ICDL-Epirob 2016 - Babybot Challenge approaching deadline June 15th

Arnaud Blanchard arnaud.blanchard at ensea.fr
Sat Jun 11 02:56:05 PDT 2016


IEEE-ICDL-Epirob 2016 - Babybot Challenge approaching deadline 
Cergy-Pontoise / Paris, France
September 19-22th, 2016
http://icdl-epirob.org <http://icdl-epirob.org/>
Six associated workshops

Babybot Challenge Overview
======================

The field of developmental robotics forms a bridge between two research communities: those who study learning and development in humans and those who study comparable processes in artificial systems. The Babybot Challenge is designed to help strengthen this bridge. Specifically, participants in the challenge will select from a list of five infant studies, and design a model that captures infants' performance on the chosen task. Submissions will be judged by three criteria: (1) How well does the model represent the particular features of the research paradigm? (2) How closely does the performance of the model replicate the findings from the chosen study? And (3) what novel insights or explanations for the observed developmental pattern are generated by the model?
Format:

Participation in the challenge is divided into two stages. During the first stage of the challenge, authors will submit a 4-8 pages paper through ras.paperplaza.net <http://ras.paperplaza.net/> (there is no additional charge for pages 7/8). Papers will be pre-screened, and submissions that are accepted for the challenge will then participate in the second stage, an oral presentation at a special session of the conference.

Deadline
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June, 15th 2016, we can be flexible contact us.

Questions ?
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Email Sofiane Boucenna ( sofiane.boucenna at ensea.fr <mailto:sofiane.boucenna at ensea.fr> ), Arnaud Blanchard ( arnaud.blanchard at ensea.fr <mailto:arnaud.blanchard at ensea.fr> ) or Alex Pitti ( alexandre.pitti at ensea.fr <mailto:alexandre.pitti at ensea.fr> )

Infant Studies (please select one)
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On the processes leading to the development of reaching in infancy

Daniela Corbetta
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For decades, the development of infant reaching has been thought to involve the active role of vision in guiding the arm and hand toward the target. In recent years, however, this role of vision in the early emergence of infant reaching has been downplayed. Studies have shown that young infants can learn to reach in the dark as long as they have had some prior visual experience (e.g. Clifton et al., 1993), and others have emphasized the primary role of proprioception (over vision) in learning to guide the arm toward the target location (e.g. Thelen et al. 1993). The two papers provided for the ICDL-EPIROB 2016 challenge aim to examine new scenarios that could account for the process of learning to reach in infancy. The Corbetta et al. (2014) is a hypothesis and theory paper based on the preliminary data of three infants followed weekly over the transition to reaching. Findings reveal that during the first weeks following reach onset, infants actually learn to map vision on their movement, and not the reverse as thought before. These findings suggest that prior to reaching onset, infants may acquire a reliable sense of their body and movement in space, prior to learning to how to calibrate vision in relation to their body centered proprioceptive experience. The second paper (Williams & Corbetta, under review) examines the impact of movement consequences on learning to reach. Findings show that toy motion and sound that is contingent to successful contacts with the toy is more reinforcing for learning to reach compared to a more visually attractive situation where a similar target is moving and sounding independently of infant actions. It appears that discovering the consequences of the action is more important for driving reaching development than attracting infant visual attention toward the target.

- Corbetta, D. Thurman, S.L. Wiener, R.F. Guan, Y. and Williams, J.L. (2014) Mapping the feel of the arm with the sight of the object: on the embodied origins of infant reaching Frontiers in Psychology, 5, 00576. ( http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00576/full <http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00576/full> )
- Williams Joshua L, Corbetta Daniela (2016) Assessing the impact of movement consequences on the development of early reaching in infancy. Frontiers in Psychology, 7, 00587. ( http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00587/full <http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00587/full> )

Papers from 2015 still valid for 2016:
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- Cognition/Perception:  Sommerville, J.A., Woodward, A.L., & Needham, A. (2005) Action experience alters 3-month-old infants' perception of others' actions. Cognition, 96, B1-B11. ( http://woodwardlab.uchicago.edu/Publications_files/Sommerville%202005.pdf <http://woodwardlab.uchicago.edu/Publications_files/Sommerville%202005.pdf> )
- Language/Social: Iverson, J. M., & Goldin-Meadow, S. (2005). Gesture paves the way for language development. Psychological Science, 16, 367-371. ( https://goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu/sites/goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/PDFs/2005_Iverson_GM.pdf <https://goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu/sites/goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/PDFs/2005_Iverson_GM.pdf> )
- Motor Skill: von Hofsten, C. (1984). Developmental changes in the organization of prereaching movements. Developmental Psychology, 20, 378-388. ( http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Claes_Hofsten/publication/232516582_Developmental_changes_in_the_organization_of_prereaching_movements/links/0912f50d191cf9b03b000000.pdf <http://www.researchgate.net/profile/Claes_Hofsten/publication/232516582_Developmental_changes_in_the_organization_of_prereaching_movements/links/0912f50d191cf9b03b000000.pdf> )










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