Self-organization of early vocal development in infants and machines: The role of intrinsic motivation

Clément Moulin-Frier, Sao M. Nguyen, Pierre Yves Oudeyer

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

We bridge the gap between two issues in infant development: vocal development and intrinsic motivation. We propose and experimentally test the hypothesis that general mechanisms of intrinsically motivated spontaneous exploration, also called curiosity-driven learning, can self-organize developmental stages during early vocal learning. We introduce a computational model of intrinsically motivated vocal exploration, which allows the learner to autonomously structure its own vocal experiments, and thus its own learning schedule, through a drive to maximize competence progress. This model relies on a physical model of the vocal tract, the auditory system and the agent's motor control as well as vocalizations of social peers. We present computational experiments that show how such a mechanism can explain the adaptive transition from vocal self-exploration with little influence from the speech environment, to a later stage where vocal exploration becomes influenced by vocalizations of peers. Within the initial self-exploration phase, we show that a sequence of vocal production stages self-organizes, and shares properties with data from infant developmental psychology: the vocal learner first discovers how to control phonation, then focuses on vocal variations of unarticulated sounds, and finally automatically discovers and focuses on babbling with articulated proto-syllables. As the vocal learner becomes more proficient at producing complex sounds, imitating vocalizations of peers starts to provide high learning progress explaining an automatic shift from self-exploration to vocal imitation.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberArticle 1006
JournalFrontiers in Psychology
Volume4
Issue numberJAN
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Feb 2014

Keywords

  • Curiosity-driven learning
  • Goal babbling
  • Imitation
  • Interactive learning
  • Intrinsic motivation
  • Self-organization
  • Vocal development

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