仿生工程学报 ›› 2017, Vol. 14 ›› Issue (2): 327-335.doi: 10.1016/S1672-6529(16)60401-8
Dae-Gun Kim1, Serin Lee2, Cheol-Hu Kim1, Sungho Jo3, Phill-Seung Lee1
Dae-Gun Kim1, Serin Lee2, Cheol-Hu Kim1, Sungho Jo3, Phill-Seung Lee1
摘要: In research on small mobile robots and biomimetic robots, locomotion ability remains a major issue despite many advances in technology. However, evolution has led to there being many real animals capable of excellent locomotion. This paper presents a “parasitic robot system” whereby locomotion abilities of an animal are applied to a robot task. We chose a turtle as our first host animal and designed a parasitic robot that can perform “operant conditioning”. The parasitic robot, which is attached to the turtle, can induce object-tracking behavior of the turtle toward a Light Emitting Diode (LED) and positively reinforce the behavior through repeated stimulus-response interaction. After training sessions over five weeks, the robot could successfully control the direction of movement of the trained turtles in the waypoint navigation task. This hybrid animal-robot interaction system could provide an alternative solution to some of the limitations of conventional mobile robot systems in various fields, and could also act as a useful interaction system for the behavioral sciences.