Abstract
A dozen robotics-related PhD projects are brought together to provide a good overview of the state of the art in solving problems by defining joint probability distributions over both sensor readings and actions.
Maintenance: Tuesday, 17th of May 2022 - maintenance work will take place on the search engine from 7:30-10:00am. During this time the search functions on ZORA and JDB will be temporarily unavailable.
Cook, M (2009). Book review: Probabilistic reasoning and decision making in sensory-motor systems / Pierre Bessière, Christian Laugier, Roland Siegwart (Eds.). Springer, 2008. The Neuromorphic Engineer:online.
A dozen robotics-related PhD projects are brought together to provide a good overview of the state of the art in solving problems by defining joint probability distributions over both sensor readings and actions.
A dozen robotics-related PhD projects are brought together to provide a good overview of the state of the art in solving problems by defining joint probability distributions over both sensor readings and actions.
Item Type: | Journal Article, refereed, original work |
---|---|
Communities & Collections: | 07 Faculty of Science > Institute of Neuroinformatics |
Dewey Decimal Classification: | 570 Life sciences; biology |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | robotics |
Language: | English |
Date: | 23 February 2009 |
Deposited On: | 01 Mar 2010 10:23 |
Last Modified: | 29 Jul 2020 21:52 |
Publisher: | Institute of Neuromorphic Engineering |
ISSN: | 1548-5625 |
OA Status: | Green |
Publisher DOI: | https://doi.org/10.2417/1200902.1523 |
Official URL: | http://www.ine-news.org/view.php?source=1523-2009-02-11 |
Related URLs: | http://www.ini.uzh.ch/node/24320 (Organisation) |
TrendTerms displays relevant terms of the abstract of this publication and related documents on a map. The terms and their relations were extracted from ZORA using word statistics. Their timelines are taken from ZORA as well. The bubble size of a term is proportional to the number of documents where the term occurs. Red, orange, yellow and green colors are used for terms that occur in the current document; red indicates high interlinkedness of a term with other terms, orange, yellow and green decreasing interlinkedness. Blue is used for terms that have a relation with the terms in this document, but occur in other documents.
You can navigate and zoom the map. Mouse-hovering a term displays its timeline, clicking it yields the associated documents.