In today's episode we deal with the question of communication, what it means, where it comes from, and how it can be applied to robots. We first speak with Sara Mitri, whose research spans both robotics and evolutionary biology and tries to answer basic questions on how communication evolved many millennia ago using high-tech robotics of the 21st century. We then speak with Prof. Jürgen Jost who is director of two research groups a the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences. He'll be giving us his thoughts on the intentionality of robot communication.
Sara Mitri
Sara Mitri is a researcher working in collaboration with both the robotics-oriented Laboratory of Intelligent Systems, lead by Prof. Floreano at the EPFL in Switzerland and the biology-oriented Keller Group at the University of Lausanne. Mitri is studying communication and cooperation in social animals in an unconventional way. By using ground-based S-Bot robots to model biological agents, she hopes to be better able to control the various parameters of evolution than by using biological systems such as bacteria or insects.
Mitri's recent articles in Current Biology and PNAS have been receiving a lot of media attention. Partly because of the resulting new scientific insights, but also because of the work's unusual and powerful method. While retaining many of the real-world complexities present in biological systems, Mitri's robotic models allow complete access to all model parameters. And there is another key advantage: Today very little is known about the evolution of phenomena like communication, because they leave no trace in the fossil record. By conducting artificial evolution, Mitri's work allows to reconstruct part of that missing evolutionary history and shed light on the origins of communication in all animals, from simple cells to us humans.
This site uses Google Analytics, Feedburner, Blogger, and the Yahoo Mediaplayer to enhance your experience. You can access the small print here
About
Robots is the podcast for news and views on robotics. In addition to insights from high-profile professionals, Robots will take you for a ride through the world's research labs, robotics companies and their latest innovations.
New episodes are released every two weeks, on Fridays at 9am GMT.
Next episode: Friday, 12th of March 2010
Search
Subscribe to feed
Subscribe to Robots using iTunes or other podcatchers by clicking on the following links:
iTunes
RSS feed
Stitcher
Subscribe by email
Enter your email address to stay up to date with new episodes by mail:
Donate
Your donation helps the Robots Association to sustain the Robots podcast and deliver high quality, educational information for the robotics community and the general public for free.
The Robots Association is a tax exempt non-profit association according to Swiss law
(Art.60 ff. ZGB) with headquarters in Lausanne. All credit card donations are processed by PayPal.