Sensorimotor Visual Perception on Embodied System Using Free Energy Principle
Kanako Esaki, Tadayuki Matsumura, Kiyoto Ito, Hiroyuki Mizuno

TL;DR
This paper presents an embodied system based on the free energy principle for sensorimotor visual perception, demonstrating how limited sensory input and memory models enable recognition tasks through active exploration.
Contribution
It introduces a novel embodied system integrating a body and generative memory to model sensorimotor visual perception under the free energy principle.
Findings
Attention area moves to reduce uncertainty over repetitions
System achieves highest probability for correct character recognition
Changing initial attention affects final recognition bias
Abstract
We propose an embodied system based on the free energy principle (FEP) for sensorimotor visual perception. We evaluated it in a character-recognition task using the MNIST dataset. Although the FEP has successfully described a rule that living things obey mathematically and claims that a biological system continues to change its internal models and behaviors to minimize the difference in predicting sensory input, it is not enough to model sensorimotor visual perception. An embodiment of the system is the key to achieving sensorimotor visual perception. The proposed embodied system is configured by a body and memory. The body has an ocular motor system controlling the direction of eye gaze, which means that the eye can only observe a small focused area of the environment. The memory is not photographic, but is a generative model implemented with a variational autoencoder that contains…
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