Artificial curiosity for autonomous space exploration
journal contribution
posted on 2022-06-02, 11:44authored byVincent Graziano, Tobias Glasmachers, Tom Schaul, Leo Pape, Giuseppe Cuccu, Juxi LeitnerJuxi Leitner, Jürgen Schmidhuber
Curiosity is an essential driving force for science
as well as technology, and has led mankind
to explore its surroundings, all the way to our current
understanding of the universe. Space science
and exploration is at the pinnacle of each of
these developments, in that it requires the most advanced
technology, explores our world and outer
space, and constantly pushes the frontier of scientific
knowledge. Manned space missions carry disproportionate
costs and risks, so it is only natural
for the field to strive for autonomous exploration.
While recent innovations in engineering, robotics
and AI provide solutions to many sub-problems
of autonomous exploration, insufficient emphasis
has been placed on the higher level question of
autonomously deciding what to explore. Artificial
curiosity, the subject of this paper, precisely addresses
this issue. We will introduce formal notions
of “interestingness” based on the concepts of (1)
compression progress through discovery of novel
regularities in the observations, and (2) coherence
progress through selection of data that “fits” the
already known data in a compression-based way.
Further, we discuss how to construct a system that
exhibits curiosity driven by the interestingness of
certain types of novel observations, with the mission
to curiously go where no probe has gone before