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May 2002
ISBN 0262042037
625 pp.
104 illus.
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Imitation in Animals and Artifacts
Kerstin Dautenhahn and Chrystopher L. Nehaniv
The effort to explain the imitative abilities of humans and other animals draws on fields as diverse as animal behavior, artificial intelligence, computer science, comparative psychology, neuroscience, primatology, and linguistics. This volume represents a first step toward integrating research from those studying imitation in humans and other animals, and those studying imitation through the construction of computer software and robots.

Imitation is of particular importance in enabling robotic or software agents to share skills without the intervention of a programmer and in the more general context of interaction and collaboration between software agents and humans. Imitation provides a way for the agent--whether biological or artificial--to establish a 'social relationship' and learn about the demonstrator's actions, in order to include them in its own behavioral repertoire. Building robots and software agents that can imitate other artificial or human agents in an appropriate way involves complex problems of perception, experience, context, and action, solved in nature in various ways by animals that imitate.
Table of Contents
 Preface
1 The Agent-Based Perspective on Imitation
by Kerstin Dautenhahn and Chrystopher L. Nehaniv
2 The Correspondence Problem
by Chrystopher L. Nehaniv and Kerstin Dautenhahn
3 Vocal, Social, and Self-imitation by Bottlenosed Dolphins
by Louis M. Herman
4 Allospecific Referential Speech Acquisition in Grey Parrots (Psittacus erithacus): Evidence for Multiple Levels of Avial Vocal Imitation
by Irene M. Pepperberg
5 On Avian Imitation: Cognitive and Ethological Perspectives
by Johannes Fritz and Kirt Kotrschal
6 Art Imitates Life: Programming by Example as an Imitation Game
by Henry Lieberman
7 Learning to Fly
by Claude Sammut, Scott Hurst, Dana Kedzier, and Donald Michie
8 Imitation of Sequential and Hierarchical Structure in Action: Experimental Studies with Children and Chimpanzees
by Andrew Whiten
9 Three Sources of Information in Social Learning
by Josep Call and Malinda Carpenter
10 The Mirror System, Imitation, and the Evolution of Language
by Michael A. Arbib
11 Imitation: A means to Enhance Learning of a Synthetic Protolanguage in Autonomous Robots
by Aude Billard
12 Rethinking the Language Bottleneck: Why Don't Animals Learn to Communicate?
by Michael Oliphant
13 Imitation of a Dual-Route Process Featuring Predictive and Learning Components: A Biologically Plausible Computational Model
by John Demiris and Gillian Hayes
14 Challenges in Building Robots That Imitate People
by Cynthia Breazeal and Brian Scassellati
15 Art Imitates Life: Programming by Example as an Imitation Game
by Henry Lieberman
16 Imitation or Somthing Simpler? Modeling Simple Mechanisms for Social Information Processing
by Jason Noble and Peter M. Todd
17 Imitation as a Perceptual Process
by Robert W. Mitchell
18 "Do Monkeys Ape?" - Ten Years After
by Elisabetta Visalberghi and Dorothy Fragaszy
19 Transformational And Associative Theories of Imitation
by Cecilia Heyes
20 Dimensions of Imitative Perception-Action Mediation
by Stefan Vogt
21 Goal Representations in Imitative Actions
by Harold Bekkering and Wolfgang Prinz
22 Information Replication in Culture: Three Modes for the Transmission of Culture Elements through Observed Action
by Oliver R. Goodenough
 Appendix
 Contributors
 Index
 
 


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