How the Body Shapes the Way We Think - R. Pfeifer, J. Bongard (MIT, 2007) WW.pdf

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How the Body Shapes the Way We Think
A New View of Intelligence
Rolf Pfeifer and Josh Bongard
with a contribution by Simon Grand
Foreword by Rodney Brooks
Illustrations by Shun Iwasawa
A Bradford Book
The MIT Press
Cambridge, Massachusetts
London, England
 
© 2007 Massachusetts Institute of Technology
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic
or mechanical means (including photocopying, recording, or information storage and
retrieval) without permission in writing from the publisher.
MIT Press books may be purchased at special quantity discounts for business or sales
promotional use. For information, please email special_sales@mitpress.mit.edu or write to
Special Sales Department, The MIT Press, 55 Hayward Street, Cambridge, MA 02142.
This book was set in Syntax and Times Roman by SNP Best-set Typesetter Ltd., Hong
Kong. Printed and bound in the United States of America.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Pfeifer, Rolf, 1947–
How the body shapes the way we think : a new view of intelligence / by Rolf Pfeifer
and Josh Bongard ; with a contribution by Simon Grand ; foreword by Rodney Brooks ;
illustrations by Shun Iwasawa.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references (p. ).
ISBN-13: 978-0-262-16239-5 (alk. paper)
ISBN-10: 0-262-16239-3 (alk. paper)
1. Artificial intelligence. 2. Cognitive science. I. Bongard, Josh. II. Grand, Simon.
III. Title.
Q335.P445 2006
006.3—dc22
2006044919
10987654321
 
To my friends in Japan (R. P.)
To Toby, Carol, and Ralph (J. B.)
 
Contents
Foreword by Rodney Brooks xiii
Preface xvii
I
Intelligence, Artificial Intelligence, Embodiment, and What the Book Is
About 1
1
Intelligence, Thinking, and Artificial Intelligence 5
1.1 Thinking, Cognition, and Intelligence 7
1.2 The Mystery of Intelligence 11
1.3 Defining Intelligence 14
1.4 Artificial Intelligence 17
1.5 Embodiment and Its Implications 18
1.6 Summary 22
2
Artificial Intelligence: The Landscape 25
2.1 Successes of the Classical Approach 27
2.2 Problems of the Classical Approach 30
2.3 The Embodied Turn 34
2.4 The Role of Neuroscience 37
2.5 Diversification 39
2.6 Biorobotics 41
2.7 Developmental Robotics 44
2.8 Ubiquitous Computing and Interfacing Technology 47
2.9 Artificial Life and Multiagent Systems 49
2.10 Evolutionary Robotics 53
2.11 Summary 54
 
viii
Contents
II
Toward a Theory of Intelligence 57
3
Prerequisites for a Theory of Intelligence 61
3.1 Level of Generality and Form of Theory 62
3.2 Diversity-Compliance 67
3.3 Frame of Reference 72
3.4 The Synthetic Methodology 77
3.5 Time Perspectives 82
3.6 Emergence 85
3.7 Summary 88
4
Intelligent Systems: Properties and Principles 89
4.1 Real Worlds and Virtual Worlds 90
4.2 Properties of Complete Agents 95
4.3 Agent Design Principle 1: The Three-Constituents
Principle 100
4.4 Agent Design Principle 2: The Complete-Agent
Principle 104
4.5 Agent Design Principle 3: Cheap Design 107
4.6 Agent Design Principle 4: Redundancy 113
4.7 Agent Design Principle 5: Sensory-Motor
Coordination 117
4.8 Agent Design Principle 6: Ecological Balance 123
4.9 Agent Design Principle 7: Parallel, Loosely Coupled
Processes 134
4.10 Agent Design Principle 8: Value 137
4.11 Summary and Conclusions 140
5
Development: From Locomotion to Cognition 141
5.1 Motivation 143
5.2 Toward Developmental Robot Design 145
5.3 From Locomotion to Cognition: A Case Study 149
5.4 From Gait Patterns to Body Image to Cognition 153
5.5 The Symbol Grounding Problem 159
5.6 Matching Brain and Body Dynamics 161
5.7 Broadening the Scope: Other Aspects of Development 164
5.8 Learning in Embodied Systems 168
5.9 Social Interaction 170
5.10 Development: Where Are We and Where Do We Go from
Here? 173
 
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