| 1. |
Contact Sensors. (7 MB, 6 Minutes) |
|
This tutorial demonstrates how to use contact sensors to detect collisions
between your organism and other objects in the environment. This tutorial
extends the Joint Angle tutorial so you should complete it first.
|
| |
| 1. |
Eating. (57 MB, 36 Minutes) |
|
This tutorial shows you how to build a simple predator object that can track prey using scent.
When the prey gets too close the predator shoots out its tongue to catch and immobilize it. Then
it can feed on it to replenish its energy stores so it can remain alive.
|
| |
| 3. |
Joint Angle. (18 MB, 18 Minutes) |
|
This tutorial demonstrates how to use joint angle information in your neural
networks. |
| |
| 4. |
Odor Tracking. (35 MB, 22 Minutes) |
|
This tutorial shows how to add odor emitters to the virtual environment, and how to configure your
organism to detect the odors and use them to control behaviors. This example creates a simple
prey object that moves back and forth along a one-dimensional track erratically. It emits an odor that a predator uses to orient
its head towards.
|
| |
| 4. |
Touch Receptive Fields. (40 MB, 29 Minutes) |
|
This tutorial shows how to add a sense of touch to your organisms by adding pressure sensitive receptive
fields to the surface of objects. The tutorial shows you how to build a piece of virtual skin that is probed
at different points to produce different responses in a population of six sensory neurons.
|
| |