Cybernetics promoted machine-supported investigations of adaptive sensorimotor behaviors observed in biological systems. This methodological approach receive s renewed attention in contemporary robotics, cognitive ethology, and the cognitive neurosciences. Its distinctive features concern machine experiments, and their role in testing behavioural models and explanations flowing from them. Cybernetic explanations of behavioural events, regularities, and capacities rely on multiply realizable mechanism schemata, and strike a sensible balance between causal and unifying constraints. The multiple realizability of cybernetic mechanism schemata paves the way to principled comparisons between biological systems and machines. Various methodological issues involved in the transition from mechanism schemata to their machine instantiations are addressed here, by reference to a simple sensorimotor coordination task. These concern the proper treatment of ceteris paribus clauses in experimental settings, the significance of running experiments with correct but incomplete machine instantiations of mechanism schemata, and the advantage of operating with real machines - as opposed to simulated ones - immersed in real environments.
Tamburrini, G., Datteri, E. (2005). Machine Experiments and Theoretical Modelling: from Cybernetic Methodology to Neuro-Robotics. MINDS AND MACHINES, 15(3-4), 335-358 [10.1007/s11023-005-2924-x].
Machine Experiments and Theoretical Modelling: from Cybernetic Methodology to Neuro-Robotics
DATTERI, EDOARDO
2005
Abstract
Cybernetics promoted machine-supported investigations of adaptive sensorimotor behaviors observed in biological systems. This methodological approach receive s renewed attention in contemporary robotics, cognitive ethology, and the cognitive neurosciences. Its distinctive features concern machine experiments, and their role in testing behavioural models and explanations flowing from them. Cybernetic explanations of behavioural events, regularities, and capacities rely on multiply realizable mechanism schemata, and strike a sensible balance between causal and unifying constraints. The multiple realizability of cybernetic mechanism schemata paves the way to principled comparisons between biological systems and machines. Various methodological issues involved in the transition from mechanism schemata to their machine instantiations are addressed here, by reference to a simple sensorimotor coordination task. These concern the proper treatment of ceteris paribus clauses in experimental settings, the significance of running experiments with correct but incomplete machine instantiations of mechanism schemata, and the advantage of operating with real machines - as opposed to simulated ones - immersed in real environments.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.