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Paper submission: 30 April 2008 Paper notification: 31 May 2008 Camera-ready: 30 June 2008 Conference: 31 July - 2 August 2008
In the past 7 years, the Epigenetic Robotics annual conference has established itself as a unique place where original interdisciplinary research from developmental sciences, neuroscience, biology, cognitive robotics, and artificial intelligence is being presented.
Psychological theory and empirical evidence is being used to inform epigenetic robotic models, and these models can be used as theoretical tools to make experimental predictions in developmental psychology.
As in previous years, we encourage submissions from researchers whose work broadly intersects the fields (and subdisciplines) of developmental science, robotics, and neuroscience. As a special feature, this year we are also highlighting a specific organizational theme: evolution and development as related processes of change.
The particular focus of this theme is on the dynamic interplay between ontogeny and phylogeny. In other words, how do new abilities and skills that emerge during development influence the path of evolution, and how do subsequent evolutionary changes help to create new developmental trajectories? This is a question that fits well within the mission of epigenetic robotics, as it spans not only a wide range of research areas and academic disciplines (e.g., biology, psychology, AI and machine learning, linguistics, anthropology, etc.) but also a broad spectrum of spatial and temporal scales (e.g., neurons, brains, social communities, cultures, etc.).
We are especially interested in submissions that will enhance the emerging dialog between evolutionary and developmental perspectives. Relevant topics include, but are not limited to:
- Artificial embryology
- Morphogenesis, differentiation, and regulation
- Behavioral inheritance and social learning
- The evolution of language acquisition
- Phylogenetic constraints on perceptual processing (e.g., face perception)
- Neuroplasticity and the evolution of cognition
- Evolutionary influences on mother-infant bonding
- Modularity of mind (evolutionary constraints on neural processing)
- Tool-use and problem-solving in humans, non-human primates, and machines
Organising Committee
- Luc Berthouze
- Matthew Schlesinger
- Christian Balkenius
Program Committee (confirmed) Minoru Asada (Osaka University, Japan)
Gianluca Baldassarre (CNR, Rome, Italy)
Christian Balkenius (Lund University, Sweden)
Luc Berthouze (University of Sussex, UK)
Nadia Berthouze (University College London, UK)
Mark Bickhard (Lehigh University, USA)
Lola Canamero (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Robert Clowes (University of Sussex, UK)
Chris Conway (Indiana University, IN)
Rick Dale (University of Memphis, TN)
Kerstin Dautenhahn (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Ezequiel di Paolo (University of Sussex, UK)
Lakshmi Gogate (SUNY Health Science Center at Brooklyn, USA)
Rod Grupen (University of Massachusetts, USA)
Inman Harvey (University of Sussex, UK)
George Hollich (Purdue University, USA)
Frederic Kaplan (EPFL, Switzerland)
Giorgio Metta (LIRA-Lab, Genoa, Italy)
Marco Mirolli (CNR, Rome, Italy)
Javier R. Movellan (UC San Diego, USA)
Yukie Nagai (University of Bielefeld, Germany)
Chrystopher Nehaniv (University of Hertfordshire, UK)
Pierre-Yves Oudeyer (INRIA, France)
Rolf Pfeifer (University of Zurich, Switzerland)
Maartje Raijmakers (University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
David Rakison (Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Arnaud Revel (CNRS, ENSEA, University of Cergy Pontoise, France)
Massimiliano Schembri (CNR, Rome, Italy)
Matthew Schlesinger (Southern Illinois University, USA)
Gregor Schoener (Ruhr-Universitat Bochum, Germany)
Sylvain Sirois (Manchester University, UK)
Selected books:
- Epigenetic Inheritance and Evolution: The Lamarckian Dimension (1995). OUP, Oxford [with Marion Lamb]
- Animal Traditions: Behavioural Inheritance in Evolution (2000). CUP, Cambridge. [with Eytan Avital]
- Evolution
in Four Dimensions: Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Symbolic
Variation in the History of Lifei (2005). MIT Press, Cambridge, MA
[with Marion Lamb]
Prof. Susan OyamaProf.
Susan Oyama Trained at Harvard University’s Social Relations
Department, Susan Oyama has written widely on the nature/nurture
opposition and on the concepts of development, evolution, and genetic
information. She wrote and edited Aggression with others, under the pen
name John Klama (Wiley in the US and Longman in the UK, 1988), and in
2000, her essay collection, Evolution's Eye: A Systems View of the
Biology-Culture Divide was published, along with an expanded edition of
The Ontogeny of Information, considered by many to be the foundational
text of the “developmental systems” perspective. With Paul Griffiths
and Russell Gray, Oyama also edited Cycles of Contingency, a volume of
papers on developmental systems by scholars from many fields.
Oyama is Professor Emerita at the John Jay College of Criminal
Justice and The Graduate School and University Center, both of The City
University of New York. She has also taught at Sarah Lawrence College
and in the Program in Science, Technology and Power of The New School’s
Eugene Lang College.
Recent publications include:
- 2007 Sin techo, sin muros, sin piso. In E. Suárez Díaz
(Ed.), Variedad infinita: Ciencia y representación un enfoque histórico
y filosófico (pp. 91-105). UNAM Publications and Editorial Limusa:
Mexico.
- 2006 Speaking of nature. In Y. Haila
& C. Dyke (Eds.), How does nature speak? The dynamics of the human
ecological condition (pp. 49-65). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
- Boundaries and (constructive)
interaction. In Christoph Rehmann-Sutter & Eva M. Neumann-Held
(Eds.), Genes in development. Re-reading the molecular paradigm (pp.
272-289). Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Prof. Domenico ParisiProf.
Domenico Parisi has been working in the last 20 years on neural network
models that analyze behavior as resulting from the interaction of the
organism with the environment and from both evolutionary processes at
the population level and learning processes at the individual level.
His work includes models of development as partly due to a genetically
inherited developmental program and partly to the individual's
experience. Much of his research has been concerned with language and
with the role of three processes of change in language: the
evolutionary emergence of language, the learning of language by the
invidual by imitating others, and the changes in socially transmitted
language across successive generations. Parisi is with the Institute of
Cognitive Sciences and Technologies of the National Research Council in
Rome, and he has been director of the Institute from 1986 to 1994.
He has been co-author of a book on Rethinking Innateness. A
Connectionist Perspective on Development, with J.L. Elman et al. (MIT
Press, 1997) and has edited, with A. Cangelosi, the booK Simulating the
Evolution of Language (Springer, 2002). A paper with M. Mirolli titled
"How producer bias can favor the evolution of communication. An
analysis of evolutionary dynamics", is in press in the journal Adaptive
Behavior.
Prof. Claudio Stern
Claudio Stern is "J Z Young Professor" and Head of the Research
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology. He also chairs the UCL
Centre for Stem Cells and Regenerative Medicine
(www.ucl.ac.uk/stemcells). He has been elected Fellow of the Academy of
Medical Sciences and of the Latin-American Academy of Sciences and
member of EMBO and in 2006 he was awarded the prestigious Waddington
Medal from the British Society for Developmental Biology.
Selected books:
- Essential Developmental Biology: A Practical Approach
(1993). IRL Press at Oxford University Press, Oxford [with P.W.H.
Holland]
- Gastrulation: from cells to embryo (2004). Cold Spring Harbor Press.

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