Exploiting the gain-modulation mechanism in parieto-motor neurons: application to visuomotor transformations and embodied simulation.

Neural Netw

Laboratoire ETIS - UMR CNRS 8051, Université de Cergy-Pontoise, Bat. St-Martin, 2, avenue Adolphe-Chauvin, F 95302 Cergy-Pontoise Cedex, France. Electronic address:

Published: February 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The self-other correspondence problem in imitation involves transforming one person's motor actions to match your own, requiring a sensorimotor system for reference frame adjustment.
  • Gain-modulation in parietal neurons may facilitate this transformation by integrating sensory information and enabling the learning of different reference frames.
  • In robotic experiments, these neurons adjust visuo-motor signals based on various factors, which is crucial for adapting to changes in body orientation, tools, or social interactions.

Article Abstract

The so-called self-other correspondence problem in imitation demands to find the transformation that maps the motor dynamics of one partner to our own. This requires a general purpose sensorimotor mechanism that transforms an external fixation-point (partner's shoulder) reference frame to one's own body-centered reference frame. We propose that the mechanism of gain-modulation observed in parietal neurons may generally serve these types of transformations by binding the sensory signals across the modalities with radial basis functions (tensor products) on the one hand and by permitting the learning of contextual reference frames on the other hand. In a shoulder-elbow robotic experiment, gain-field neurons (GF) intertwine the visuo-motor variables so that their amplitude depends on them all. In situations of modification of the body-centered reference frame, the error detected in the visuo-motor mapping can serve then to learn the transformation between the robot's current sensorimotor space and the new one. These situations occur for instance when we turn the head on its axis (visual transformation), when we use a tool (body modification), or when we interact with a partner (embodied simulation). Our results defend the idea that the biologically-inspired mechanism of gain modulation found in parietal neurons can serve as a basic structure for achieving nonlinear mapping in spatial tasks as well as in cooperative and social functions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neunet.2014.08.009DOI Listing

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