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All biological systems with vision move about their environments
and successfully perform many tasks. The same capabilities are
needed in the world of robots. To that end, recent results in
empirical fields that study insects and primates, as well as in
theoretical and applied disciplines that design robots, have
uncovered a number of the principles of navigation. To offer a
unifying approach to the situation, this book brings together ideas
from zoology, psychology, neurobiology, mathematics, geometry,
computer science, and engineering. It contains theoretical
developments that will be essential in future research on the topic
-- especially new representations of space with less complexity
than Euclidean representations possess. These representations allow
biological and artificial systems to compute from images in order
to successfully deal with their environments.
In this book, the barriers between different disciplines have been
smoothed and the workings of vision systems of biological organisms
are made clear in computational terms to computer scientists and
engineers. At the same time, fundamental principles arising from
computational considerations are made clear both to empirical
scientists and engineers. Empiricists can generate a number of
hypotheses that they could then study through various experiments.
Engineers can gain insight for designing robotic systems that
perceive aspects of their environment.
For the first time, readers will find:
* the insect vision system presented in a way that can be
understood by computational scientists working in computer vision
and engineering;
* three complete, working robotic navigation systems presented
with all the issues related to their design analyzed in
detail;
* the beginning of a computational theory of direct perception, as
advocated by Gibson, presented in detail with applications for a
variety of problems; and
* the idea that vision systems could compute space representations
different from perfect metric descriptions -- and be used in
robotic tasks -- advanced for both artificial and biological
systems.
This book defines the emerging field of Active Perception which
calls for studying perception coupled with action. It is devoted to
technical problems related to the design and analysis of
intelligent systems possessing perception such as the existing
biological organisms and the "seeing" machines of the future. Since
the appearance of the first technical results on active vision,
researchers began to realize that perception -- and intelligence in
general -- is not transcendental and disembodied. It is becoming
clear that in the effort to build intelligent visual systems,
consideration must be given to the fact that perception is
intimately related to the physiology of the perceiver and the tasks
that it performs. This viewpoint -- known as Purposive,
Qualitative, or Animate Vision -- is the natural evolution of the
principles of Active Vision. The seven chapters in this volume
present various aspects of active perception, ranging from general
principles and methodological matters to technical issues related
to navigation, manipulation, recognition, learning, planning,
reasoning, and topics related to the neurophysiology of intelligent
systems.
All biological systems with vision move about their environments
and successfully perform many tasks. The same capabilities are
needed in the world of robots. To that end, recent results in
empirical fields that study insects and primates, as well as in
theoretical and applied disciplines that design robots, have
uncovered a number of the principles of navigation. To offer a
unifying approach to the situation, this book brings together ideas
from zoology, psychology, neurobiology, mathematics, geometry,
computer science, and engineering. It contains theoretical
developments that will be essential in future research on the topic
-- especially new representations of space with less complexity
than Euclidean representations possess. These representations allow
biological and artificial systems to compute from images in order
to successfully deal with their environments. In this book, the
barriers between different disciplines have been smoothed and the
workings of vision systems of biological organisms are made clear
in computational terms to computer scientists and engineers. At the
same time, fundamental principles arising from computational
considerations are made clear both to empirical scientists and
engineers. Empiricists can generate a number of hypotheses that
they could then study through various experiments. Engineers can
gain insight for designing robotic systems that perceive aspects of
their environment. For the first time, readers will find: * the
insect vision system presented in a way that can be understood by
computational scientists working in computer vision and
engineering; * three complete, working robotic navigation systems
presented with all the issues related to their design analyzed in
detail; * the beginning of a computational theory of direct
perception, as advocated by Gibson, presented in detail with
applications for a variety of problems; and * the idea that vision
systems could compute space representations different from perfect
metric descriptions -- and be used in robotic tasks -- advanced for
both artificial and biological systems.
This book defines the emerging field of Active Perception which
calls for studying perception coupled with action. It is devoted to
technical problems related to the design and analysis of
intelligent systems possessing perception such as the existing
biological organisms and the "seeing" machines of the future. Since
the appearance of the first technical results on active vision,
researchers began to realize that perception -- and intelligence in
general -- is not transcendental and disembodied. It is becoming
clear that in the effort to build intelligent visual systems,
consideration must be given to the fact that perception is
intimately related to the physiology of the perceiver and the tasks
that it performs. This viewpoint -- known as Purposive,
Qualitative, or Animate Vision -- is the natural evolution of the
principles of Active Vision. The seven chapters in this volume
present various aspects of active perception, ranging from general
principles and methodological matters to technical issues related
to navigation, manipulation, recognition, learning, planning,
reasoning, and topics related to the neurophysiology of intelligent
systems.
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