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dc.contributor.authorLuque Sola, Niceto Rafael 
dc.contributor.authorCarrillo Sánchez, Richard Rafael 
dc.contributor.authorNaveros Arrabal, Francisco 
dc.contributor.authorGarrido Alcázar, Jesús Alberto 
dc.contributor.authorSáez Lara, María José 
dc.date.accessioned2025-01-22T11:00:42Z
dc.date.available2025-01-22T11:00:42Z
dc.date.issued2014-08-19
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10481/99975
dc.description.abstractExperimental studies of the Central Nervous System (CNS) at multiple organization levels aim at understanding how information is represented and processed by the brain’s neurobiological substrate. The information processed within different neural subsystems is neurocomputed using distributed and dynamic patterns of neural activity. These emerging patterns can be hardly understood by merely taking into account individual cell activities. Studying how these patterns are elicited in the CNS under specific behavioral tasks has become a groundbreaking research topic in system neuroscience. This methodology of synthetic behavioral experimentation is also motivated by the concept of embodied neuroscience, according to which the primary goal of the CNS is to solve/facilitate the body–environment interaction. With the aim to bridge the gap between system neuroscience and biological control, this paper presents how the CNS neural structures can be connected/integrated within a body agent; in particular, an efficient neural simulator based on EDLUT (Ros et al., 2006) has been integrated within a simulated robotic environment to facilitate the implementation of object manipulating closed loop experiments (action–perception loop). This kind of experiment allows the study of the neural abstraction process of dynamic models that occurs within our neural structures when manipulating objects. The neural simulator, communication interfaces, and a robot platform have been efficiently integrated enabling real time simulations. The cerebellum is thought to play a crucial role in human-body interaction with a primary function related to motor control which makes it the perfect candidate to start building an embodied nervous system as illustrated in the simulations performed in this work.es_ES
dc.language.isoenges_ES
dc.subjectNeuroboticses_ES
dc.subjectCerebellumes_ES
dc.subjectSpiking neural networkes_ES
dc.subjectclose-lop simulationes_ES
dc.subjectEmbodied neurosciencees_ES
dc.titleIntegrated neural and robotic simulations. Simulation of cerebellar neurobiological substrate for an object-oriented dynamic model abstraction processes_ES
dc.typejournal articlees_ES
dc.relation.projectIDFP7- ICT270434es_ES
dc.relation.projectIDHBP FP7 Flagship Project 604102es_ES
dc.rights.accessRightsopen accesses_ES
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.robot.2014.08.002
dc.type.hasVersionAMes_ES


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