Search

Navigator: RI | Publications | Cognitive primitives for mobile robots

Graphics enhanced version of this site

Cognitive primitives for mobile robots
E. Tira-Thompson, N.S. Halelamien, J.J. Wales, and D.S. Touretzky
AAAI 2004 Fall Symposium Series, "The Intersection of Cognitive Science and Robotics: From Interfaces to Intelligence" report FS-04-05, 2004, pp. 110 - 111.

Jump to: Download | Abstract | Notes | Text Reference | BibTeX Reference


Download [Help]

Adobe portable document format (pdf) [219 KB]

Copyright notice: This material is presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author's copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder.


Abstract

Tekkotsu (see www.Tekkotsu.org) is an application development framework for the Sony AIBO mobile robot that endeavors to provide an intuitive set of primitives for perception, manipulation, and attentional control, drawing on insights from cognitive science. The framework also addresses some of the human-robot interaction problems faced by mobile robot application developers.


Notes

Associated lab/group: Tekkotsu Lab

Number of pages: 2


Text Reference

E. Tira-Thompson, N.S. Halelamien, J.J. Wales, and D.S. Touretzky, "Cognitive primitives for mobile robots," AAAI 2004 Fall Symposium Series, "The Intersection of Cognitive Science and Robotics: From Interfaces to Intelligence" report FS-04-05, 2004, pp. 110 - 111.


BibTeX Reference

@inproceedings{Tira-Thompson_2004_4986,
   author = "Ethan Tira-Thompson and N.S. Halelamien and J.J. Wales and David S Touretzky",
   title = "Cognitive primitives for mobile robots",
   booktitle = "AAAI 2004 Fall Symposium Series, "The Intersection of Cognitive Science and Robotics: From Interfaces to Intelligence" report FS-04-05",
   year = "2004",
   pages = "110 - 111"
}


The Robotics Institute is part of the School of Computer Science, Carnegie Mellon University.
For updates and comments, please see these instructions.
This page maintained by robotwebmaster@ri.cmu.edu