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We want to distinguish “salient face events” from “salient non-face events" so, then, if there are no faces present, the behavior can be just to do saliency tracking and look around at salient events.
At the moment the system cannot recognize anything but faces — when we integrate object recognition software, then maybe it should have some tendency to look at objects it can recognize, as well as the tendency to look at salient stuff. But if there are faces present, then in general the face-tracking behavior should overrule the saliency tracking, unless something REALLY salient pops up.
When we make the statement “Han, look at this!” (or in general "ROBOTNAME, look at this!”) cause it to temporarily prioritize looking at salient events nearby the robot. And, “Look at that!” cause it to temporarily prioritize looking at salient events anywhere.
We want to distinguish “salient face events” from “salient non-face events" so, then, if there are no faces present, the behavior can be just to do saliency tracking and look around at salient events.
At the moment the system cannot recognize anything but faces — when we integrate object recognition software, then maybe it should have some tendency to look at objects it can recognize, as well as the tendency to look at salient stuff. But if there are faces present, then in general the face-tracking behavior should overrule the saliency tracking, unless something REALLY salient pops up.
When we make the statement “Han, look at this!” (or in general "ROBOTNAME, look at this!”) cause it to temporarily prioritize looking at salient events nearby the robot. And, “Look at that!” cause it to temporarily prioritize looking at salient events anywhere.