Neural networks with motivational units
Proceedings of the second international conference on From animals to animats 2 : simulation of adaptive behavior: simulation of adaptive behavior
Who Needs Emotions: The Brain Meets the Robot (Series in Affective Science)
Who Needs Emotions: The Brain Meets the Robot (Series in Affective Science)
Adaptive Behavior - Animals, Animats, Software Agents, Robots, Adaptive Systems
Input from the external environment and input from within the body
ECAL'09 Proceedings of the 10th European conference on Advances in artificial life: Darwin meets von Neumann - Volume Part I
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We describe two simple simulations in which artificial organisms evolve an ability to respond to inputs from within their own body and these inputs themselves can evolve. In the first simulation the organisms develop an ability to respond to a pain signal caused by body damage by stopping looking for food when they feel pain since resting while the body is damaged accelerates healing of the body and increases the individual's survival chances. In the second simulation the pain signal itself evolves, that is, the body develops a tendency to send pain signals to the nervous system when the body is damaged. The results are discussed in terms of an internal robotics in which the robot's body has an internal structure and not only an external morphology and the neural network that controls the robot's behavior responds to inputs both from the external environment and from within the body.