Abstract
This paper presents a personalized contingency feedback adaptation system that aims to encourage infants aged 6 to 8 months to gradually increase the peak acceleration of their leg movements. The ultimate challenge is to determine if a socially assistive humanoid robot can guide infant learning using contingent rewards, where the reward threshold is personalized for each infant using a reinforcement learning algorithm. The model learned from the data captured by wearable inertial sensors measuring infant leg movement accelerations in an earlier study. Each infant generated a unique model that determined the behavior of the robot. The presented results were obtained from the distributions of the participants’ acceleration peaks and demonstrate that the resulting model is sensitive to the degree of differentiation among the participants; each participant (infant) should have his/her own learned policy.
This work was supported by NSF award 1706964 (PI: Smith, Co-PI: Matarić). In addition, this work was developed during an international mobility program at the University of Southern California being also partially funded by the European Union ECHORD++ project (FP7-ICT-601116), the LifeBots project (TIN2015-65686-C5) and THERAPIST project (TIN2012-38079).
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Pulido, J.C., Funke, R., García, J., Smith, B.A., Matarić, M. (2019). Adaptation of the Difficulty Level in an Infant-Robot Movement Contingency Study. In: Fuentetaja Pizán, R., García Olaya, Á., Sesmero Lorente, M., Iglesias Martínez, J., Ledezma Espino, A. (eds) Advances in Physical Agents. WAF 2018. Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, vol 855. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99885-5_6
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