International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems (Sep 2005)

Neural Processing of Auditory Signals and Modular Neural Control for Sound Tropism of Walking Machines

  • Poramate Manoonpong,
  • Frank Pasemann,
  • Joern Fischer,
  • Hubert Roth

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5772/5786
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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The specialized hairs and slit sensillae of spiders (Cupiennius salei) can sense the airflow and auditory signals in a low-frequency range. They provide the sensor information for reactive behavior, like e.g. capturing a prey. In analogy, in this paper a setup is described where two microphones and a neural preprocessing system together with a modular neural controller are used to generate a sound tropism of a four-legged walking machine. The neural preprocessing network is acting as a low-pass filter and it is followed by a network which discerns between signals coming from the left or the right. The parameters of these networks are optimized by an evolutionary algorithm. In addition, a simple modular neural controller then generates the desired different walking patterns such that the machine walks straight, then turns towards a switched-on sound source, and then stops near to it.