ATLANTIS
Artificial Language Understanding in Robots

ATLANTIS attempts to understand and model the very first stages in grounded language learning, as we see in children until the age of three: how pointing or other symbolic gestures emerge from the ontogenetic ritualization of instrumental actions, how words are learned very fast in contextualized language games, and how the first grammatical constructions emerge from concrete sentences. This requires a global, computational theory of symbolic development that informs us about what forces motivate language development, what strategies are exploited in learner and caregiver interactions to come up with more complex compositional meanings, how new grammatical structures and novel interaction patterns and formed, and how the multitude of developmental pathways observed in humans lead to a full system of multi-modal communication skills. This ambitious aim is feasible because there have been very significant advances in humanoid robotics and in the development of sensory-motor competence recently, and the time is ripe to push all this to a higher level of symbolic intelligence, going beyond simple sensory-motor loops or pattern-based intelligence towards grounded semantics, and incremental, long-term, autonomous language learning.

Research staff

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Sponsor

CHIST-ERA

Human Language Understanding: Grounding Language Learning (HLU), Call 2014 – № 2287-N35

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