HomeTechnologyAutomation and RoboticsTeaching Robots to Think Like us

Teaching Robots to Think Like us

Can intelligence be taught to robots? Advances in physical reservoir computing, a technology that makes sense of brain signals, could contribute to creating artificial intelligence machines that think like us.

researchers from the University of Tokyo outline how robots could be taught to navigate through a maze by electrically stimulating a culture of brain nerve cells connected to the machine.

These nerve cells, or neurons, were grown from living cells and acted as the physical reservoir for the computer to construct coherent signals.

The signals are regarded as homeostatic signals, telling the robot the internal environment was being maintained within a certain range and acting as a baseline as it moved freely through the maze.

Whenever the robot veered in the wrong direction or faced the wrong way, the neurons in the cell culture were disturbed by an electric impulse. Throughout trials, the robot was continually fed the homeostatic signals interrupted by the disturbance signals until it had successfully solved the maze task.

These findings suggest goal-directed behavior can be generated without any additional learning by sending disturbance signals to an embodied system. The robot could not see the environment or obtain other sensory information, so it was entirely dependent on the electrical trial-and-error impulses.

“I, myself, was inspired by our experiments to hypothesize that intelligence in a living system emerges from a mechanism extracting a coherent output from a disorganized state, or a chaotic state,” said Hirokazu Takahashi, an associate professor of mechano-informatics.

Using this principle, the researchers show intelligent task-solving abilities can be produced using physical reservoir computers to extract chaotic neuronal signals and deliver homeostatic or disturbance signals. In doing so, the computer creates a reservoir that understands how to solve the task.

“A brain of [an] elementary school kid is unable to solve mathematical problems in a college admission exam, possibly because the dynamics of the brain or their ‘physical reservoir computer’ is not rich enough,” said Takahashi. “Task-solving ability is determined by how rich a repertoire of spatiotemporal patterns the network can generate.”

The team believes using physical reservoir computing in this context will contribute to a better understanding of the brain’s mechanisms and may lead to the novel development of a neuromorphic computer.

ELE Times Research Desk
ELE Times Research Deskhttps://www.eletimes.ai
ELE Times provides extensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in-depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build experience, drive traffic, communicate your contributions to the right audience, generate leads and market your products favourably.

Related News

Must Read

Bosch Accelerates Automation and Robotics Drive

Advance robotics and the dynamic growth of humanoid systems...

AI server Boards are Boosting at ASMPT SMT Solutions

Solutions, a global technology manufacturer of hardware and software....

Bosch Introduces Third-Gen Silicon Carbide Chips for EV

As India accelerates its transition to electric mobility, the...

Vishay Extends ILHB Ferrite Beads for Wider Automotive EMC Support

Vishay Intertechnology, Inc. announces an expansion of its ILHB...

Qorvo’s New Compact Front-End Redefines X-Band Radar Performance

Qorvo introduces an X-band radar front-end solution that enables...

STMicroelectronics Unveils Ultra-Precise Automotive IMU

The ASM330LHHG1 automotive qualifies as an Inertial Measurement Unit...

TI Launches a High-Cell-Count Battery Monitor featuring EIS

Engineers can build safer, higher-performing electric vehicles and energy...

DigiKey Expands Asian Electronics Industry with Launch of Vietnam Website

The localized website reinforces DigiKey’s commitment to supporting Vietnam’s...

Implantable and Non-Invasive Continuous Health Sensors

Continuous health monitoring is transforming modern medicine. Instead of...