reviewScienceNov 16, 2007Closed access

Self-Organization, Embodiment, and Biologically Inspired Robotics

University of Zurich · Massachusetts Institute of Technology

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Robotics researchers increasingly agree that ideas from biology and self-organization can strongly benefit the design of autonomous robots. Biological organisms have evolved to perform and survive in a world characterized by rapid changes, high uncertainty, indefinite richness, and limited availability of information. Industrial robots, in contrast, operate in highly controlled environments with no or very little uncertainty. Although many challenges remain, concepts from biologically inspired (bio-inspired) robotics will eventually enable researchers to engineer machines for the real world that possess at least some of the desirable properties of biological organisms, such as adaptivity, robustness,…

Citation impact

1,211
total citations
FWCI
78.41
Percentile
100%
References
51
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Robotics
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Robot
  • Robustness (evolution)
  • Computer science
  • Evolutionary robotics
  • Biological organism
  • Human–computer interaction
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