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Progress on lifelong learning machines shows potential for bio-inspired algorithms
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 13, 2019

The image depicts one of the USC researchers' robots and the new robotic limb in action. Photo Credit: USC/Matthew Lin

Today's machine learning systems are restricted by their inability to continuously learn or adapt as they encounter new situations; their programs are fixed after training, leaving them unable to react to new, unforeseen circumstances once they are fielded.

Adding new information to cover programming deficits overwrites the existing training set. With current technology, this requires taking the system offline and retraining it on a dataset that incorporates the new information. It is a long and arduous process that DARPA's Lifelong Learning Machines (L2M) program is working to overcome.

"The L2M program's prime objective is to develop systems that can learn continuously during execution and become increasingly expert while performing tasks, are subject to safety limits, and capable of applying previous skills and knowledge to new situations, without forgetting previous learning," said Dr. Hava Siegelmann, program manager in DARPA's Information Innovation Office (I2O). "Though complex, it is an area where we are making significant progress."

First announced in 2017, L2M is over a year into research and development of next generation AI systems and their components, as well as learning mechanisms in biological organisms capable of translation into computational processes. L2M supports a large base of 30 performer groups via grants and contracts of different duration and size.

Today, L2M researcher Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas, professor of biomedical engineering and biokinesiology at USC Viterbi School of Engineering, along with USC Viterbi School of Engineering doctoral students Ali Marjaninejad, Dario Urbina-Melendez and Brian Cohn published results regarding exploration into bio-inspired AI algorithms.

In an article outlined in the March cover of Nature Machine Intelligence, Valero-Cuevas' team details their successful creation of an AI-controlled robotic limb driven by animal-like tendons capable of teaching itself a walking task, even automatically recovering from a disruption to its balance.

Behind the USC researchers' robotic limb is a bio-inspired algorithm that can learn a walking task on its own after only five minutes of "unstructured play" - or conducting random movements that enable the robot to learn its own structure as well as its surrounding environment.

The robot's ability to learn-by-doing is a significant advancement towards lifelong learning in machines. The current machine learning approaches rely on pre-programming a system for all potential scenarios, which is complex, labor intensive, and inefficient. What the USC researchers have accomplished shows that it is possible for AI systems to learn from relevant experience, finding and adapting solutions to challenges overtime.

Siegelmann noted, "We're at a major moment of transition in the field of AI. Current fixed methods underlying today's smart systems will quickly give way to systems capable of learning in the field. The missing ingredients to safer, more flexible, and more useful AI are the abilities to both learn while in operation and to apply learning to new circumstances for which the system was not previously trained.

"These abilities are necessary, for instance, for complex systems like self-driving cars to become truly functional. Incorporating L2M technologies will allow them to become increasingly expert as they drive in different conditions and will make them safer than human-driven cars. Professor Valero-Curevas and his team have successfully taken us closer to that goal; that's what the L2M project is about."

Research paper


Related Links
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ROBO SPACE
A robotic leg, born without prior knowledge, learns to walk
Los Angeles CA (SPX) Mar 13, 2019
For a newborn giraffe or wildebeest, being born can be a perilous introduction to the world - predators lie in wait for an opportunity to make a meal of the herd's weakest member. This is why many species have evolved ways for their juveniles to find their footing within minutes of birth. It's an astonishing evolutionary feat that has long inspired biologists and roboticists - and now a team of USC researchers at the USC Viterbi School of Engineering believe they have become the first to create an ... read more

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