Coordinated crawling via reinforcement learning

J R Soc Interface. 2020 Aug;17(169):20200198. doi: 10.1098/rsif.2020.0198. Epub 2020 Aug 26.

Abstract

Rectilinear crawling locomotion is a primitive and common mode of locomotion in slender soft-bodied animals. It requires coordinated contractions that propagate along a body that interacts frictionally with its environment. We propose a simple approach to understand how this coordination arises in a neuromechanical model of a segmented, soft-bodied crawler via an iterative process that might have both biological antecedents and technological relevance. Using a simple reinforcement learning algorithm, we show that an initial all-to-all neural coupling converges to a simple nearest-neighbour neural wiring that allows the crawler to move forward using a localized wave of contraction that is qualitatively similar to what is observed in Drosophila melanogaster larvae and used in many biomimetic solutions. The resulting solution is a function of how we weight gait regularization in the reward, with a trade-off between speed and robustness to proprioceptive noise. Overall, our results, which embed the brain-body-environment triad in a learning scheme, have relevance for soft robotics while shedding light on the evolution and development of locomotion.

Keywords: crawling; locomotion; neuromechanics; reinforcement learning.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Drosophila melanogaster*
  • Gait
  • Larva
  • Locomotion*
  • Proprioception