Home page for Philippe Gaussier
C.V.:
Philippe Gaussier was born in 1967 in Marseille, France. He received
the M.S. degree in electronic from Aix-Marseille University in 1989. In
1992, he received a Ph.D. degree in computer science from the
University of Paris XI (Orsay) for a work on the modelization and
simulation of a visual system inspired by mammals vision. From 1992 to
1994, he conduced research in Neural Network (NN) applications and in
control of autonomous mobile robots at the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (LAMI). From 1994 to 1998, he was assistant professor at the
ENSEA. He is now Professor at the Cergy-Pontoise University in France
and leads the neurocybernetic team of the Image and Signal processing
Lab (ETIS). Robots are used as tools to study in ``real life''
conditions the coherence and the dynamics of different cognitive models
(ecological and developmental perspective). New models can then be
proposed and lead to new neurobiological or psychological experiments.
Currently, his works are focused on one hand on the modelization of the
cognitive mechanisms involved in visual perception, motivated
navigation, action selection and on the other hand on the study of the
dynamical interactions between individuals (imitation capabilities,
social interactions, collective intelligence...).
More precisely, his research interests include the modelization of the
hippocampus and its relations with prefrontal cortex, the basal ganglia
and other cortical structures like parietal, temporal areas. He is also
working on an empirical formalism to analyze and compare different
cognitive architectures. This formalism is applied to study the
dynamics of the interactions between autonomous systems and their
development. Current robotic applications include autonomous and
on-line learning for motivated visual navigation (place learning,
visual homing, object discremination...) and imitation games.
dans la presse
demo
and video
recent publications
publications
short presentation of the team
web links:
JNNR05

