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Prix pour la Suisse:
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Prix à l'exportation:
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Robot Programming by Demonstration (PbD) examines methods by which a robot learns new skills through human guidance. Also referred to as learning by imitation, tutelage or apprenticeship learning, PbD takes inspiration from the way humans learn new skills by imitation, thereby developing methods by which new skills can be transmitted to a robot. PbD covers a broad range of applications. In industrial settings, the goal is to reduce the time and costs required to program the robot, where the rationale is to create, modify or assemble a product in a very rapid way without requiring help from an expert in robotics. PbD is perceived as particularly useful when it comes to service robots, i.e., robots deemed to work in direct collaboration with humans. In this case, methods for PbD go beyond transferring skills and offer new ways for the robot to interact with the human, from being capable of recognizing peoples motion to predicting their intentions and seconding them in the accomplishment of complex tasks. The present work addresses both challenges in investigating methods by which PbD is used to provide the robot with a generic and adaptive model of control. Robot programming by demonstration: A probabilistic approach takes a practitioners perspective and is relevant for anyone involved in robotics research or human-robot interaction, or who simply wants to discover and understand how to transfer skills to robots by imitation. The findings presented in this book emerge from various disciplines such as robot control, human-robot interaction, applied machine learning and artificial intelligence. It also takes insights from developmental and cognitive psychology. The book contains a large set of didactic and illustrative examples linked with comprehensive and practical machine learning sourcecodes available on the books companion website: http://www.programming-by-demonstration.org
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Introduction - System architecture - Comparasion and optimisation of the parameters - Extension to dynamical system and handling of perturbations - Transferring skills through active teaching methods - Using social cues to speed up the learning process - Discussion, Future work and conclusions - References - Index
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The Human brain is only 100,000 years old. Yet, this newly evolved organ endows us with unique creative capabilities beyond all other living creatures, including the gift to understand itself. As our very survival and success in life depends on utilizing our brains power, intense efforts have begun worldwide to understand the brain, reverse-engineer it and even augment its capacity.
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Although solar thermal systems are technologically mature and cost effective, they have not yet been sufficiently used in building design, where they should be playing a greater role in the reduction of fossil-fuel consumption. One main hindrance to adoption is the generally low architectural design quality of the building integration of these thermal systems.
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This groundbreaking essay on Le Corbusier provides a new perspective that is based on exhaustive archival research and the study of neglected or completely unknown documents stored at the Fondation Le Corbusier...
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Conditions for travel have changed and are still changing the world a world experiencing what John Urry, among others, calls the mobility turn. Since World War II we have been moving faster and going further a fact that has profoundly changed our way of experiencing both the world and ourselves.
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