Abstract

This article briefly reviews research in cognitive development concerning the nature of the human self. It then reviews research in developmental robotics that has attempted to retrace parts of the developmental trajectory of the self. This should be of interest to developmental psychologists, and researchers in developmental robotics. As a point of departure, one of the most characteristic aspects of human social interaction is cooperation—the process of entering into a joint enterprise to achieve a common goal. Fundamental to this ability to cooperate is the underlying ability to enter into, and engage in, a self-other relation. This suggests that if we intend for robots to cooperate with humans, then to some extent robots must engage in these self-other relations, and hence they must have some aspect of a self. Decades of research in human cognitive development indicate that the self is not fully present from the outset, but rather that it is developed in a usage-based fashion, that is, through engaging with the world, including the physical world and the social world of animate intentional agents. In an effort to characterize the self, Ulric Neisser noted that self is not unitary, and he thus proposed five types of self-knowledge that correspond to five distinct components of self: ecological, interpersonal, conceptual, temporally extended, and private. He emphasized the ecological nature of each of these levels, how they are developed through the engagement of the developing child with the physical and interpersonal worlds. Crucially, development of the self has been shown to rely on the child's autobiographical memory. From the developmental robotics perspective, this suggests that in principal it would be possible to develop certain aspects of self in a robot cognitive system where the robot is engaged in the physical and social world, equipped with an autobiographical memory system. We review a series of developmental robotics studies that make progress in this enterprise. We conclude with a summary of the properties that are required for the development of these different levels of self, and we identify topics for future research.

Highlights

  • While the notion of self is so ubiquitous in our experience, the development and origin of self is a complex process that is not yet fully understood (Damasio, 2012; Gallagher, 2013)

  • The objective of this review is to provide an overview of how developmental robotics studies that rely on autobiographical memory can accomplish to certain degrees the first four levels of self-identified by Neisser

  • Taking the self as an object of study in developmental psychology, Ulric Neisser developed a systematic approach and identified five types of self-knowledge that we reviewed above

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

While the notion of self is so ubiquitous in our experience, the development and origin of self is a complex process that is not yet fully understood (Damasio, 2012; Gallagher, 2013). From this perspective where we consider Neisser’s progressive levels of self, and an autobiographical memory capability that can store and organize experience, a new insight emerges, whereby autobiographical memory allows the structured accumulation of experience that contributes to this development of self In this context, the objective of this review is to provide an overview of how developmental robotics studies that rely on autobiographical memory can accomplish to certain degrees the first four levels of self-identified by Neisser. From this perspective, research in developmental robotics and cognitive system can contribute to the pursuit of understanding human cognitive development, and through a complimentary interaction this should contribute to more functional robot systems. Adapting to the context of family, school, culture, etc. requires the individual to accommodate the constraints inherent in these different domains

AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL MEMORY FOR DEVELOPMENT OF A ROBOT SELF
Psychologically Motivated Autobiographical Memory
Reasoning Capabilities for Knowledge Generation
Ecological Self
Interpersonal Self
Conceptual Self
Post Conditions
DISCUSSION
Temporally extended self
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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