Multimodal communication in animals, humans and robots: An introduction to perspectives in brain-inspired informatics
Neural Networks,
Volume 22,
pages 111--115,
doi: 10.1016/j.neunet.2009.01.004
- Mar 2009
Recent years have seen convergence in research on brain mechanisms and neurocomputational
approaches, culminating in the creation of a new generation of robots whose artificial brains respect
neuroscience principles and whose cognitive systems venture into higher cognitive domains such as
planning and action sequencing, complex object and concept processing, and language. The present article
gives an overview of selected projects in this general multidisciplinary field.
The work reviewed centres on research funded by the EU in the context of the New and Emergent
Science and Technology, NEST, funding scheme highlighting the topic What it means to be human.
Examples of such projects include learning by imitation (Edici project), examining the origin of
human rule-based reasoning (Far), studying the neural origins of language (Neurocom), exploring
the evolutionary origins of the human mind (Pkb140404), researching into verbal and non-verbal
communication (Refcom), using and interpreting signs (Sedsu), characterising human language by
structural complexity (Chlasc), and representing abstract concepts (Abstract).
Each of the communication-centred research projects revealed individual insights; however, there
had been little overall analysis of results and hypotheses. In the Specific Support Action Nestcom,
we proposed to analyse some NEST projects focusing on the central question What it means to
communicate and to review, understand and integrate the results of previous communicationrelated research, in order to develop and communicate multimodal experimental hypotheses for
investigation by future projects. The present special issue includes a range of papers on the interplay
between neuroinformatics, brain science and robotics in the general area of higher cognitive functions
and multimodal communication. These papers extend talks given at the NESTCOM workshops,
at ICANN (http://www.his.sunderland.ac.uk/nestcom/workshop/icann.html) in Porto and at the first
meeting of the Federation of the European Societies of Neuropsychology in Edinburgh in 2008
(http://www.his.sunderland.ac.uk/nestcom/workshop/esn.html). We hope that the collection will give a
vivid insight into current trends in the field.
@Article{WPKGPT09, author = {Wermter, Stefan and Page, M. and Knowles, Michael and Gallese, Vittorio and Pulvermüller, F. and Taylor, J.}, title = {Multimodal communication in animals, humans and robots: An introduction to perspectives in brain-inspired informatics}, journal = {Neural Networks}, number = {}, volume = {22}, pages = {111--115}, year = {2009}, month = {Mar}, publisher = {}, doi = {10.1016/j.neunet.2009.01.004}, }