A constructive model for the development of joint attention
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Connection Science
- Vol. 15 (4) , 211-229
- https://doi.org/10.1080/09540090310001655101
Abstract
This paper presents a constructive model by which a robot acquires the ability of joint attention with a human caregiver based on its embedded mechanisms of visual attention and learning with self-evaluation. The former is to look at a salient object in the robot's view, and the latter is to learn sensorimotor co-ordination when visual attention has succeeded. Since the success of visual attention does not always correspond to the success of joint attention, the robot has incorrect learning data for joint attention as well as correct data. However, the robot is expected statistically to lose incorrect data as outliers since such data do not have any correlation in the sensorimotor co-ordination while correct data have a correlation. The robot consequently acquires the ability of joint attention by finding the correlation in the sensorimotor co-ordination even if multiple objects are placed at random positions in an environment and a human caregiver does not provide any task evaluation to the robot. The experimental results show that the proposed model makes the robot reproduce the developmental process of infants' joint attention. Therefore, the proposed model could be one of the models to explain how infants develop the ability of joint attention.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Joint AttentionPublished by Taylor & Francis ,2014
- Theory of Mind for a Humanoid RobotAutonomous Robots, 2002
- Cognitive developmental robotics as a new paradigm for the design of humanoid robotsRobotics and Autonomous Systems, 2001
- Infant-like Social Interactions between a Robot and a Human CaregiverAdaptive Behavior, 2000
- Following the direction of gaze and language development in 6-month-oldsInfant Behavior and Development, 1998
- MindblindnessPublished by MIT Press ,1995
- What minds have in common is space: Spatial mechanisms serving joint visual attention in infancyBritish Journal of Developmental Psychology, 1991
- The capacity for joint visual attention in the infantNature, 1975