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Research PaperResearchia:202604.09088[Robotics > Robotics]

Robots that learn to evaluate models of collective behavior

Mathis Hocke

Abstract

Understanding and modeling animal behavior is essential for studying collective motion, decision-making, and bio-inspired robotics. Yet, evaluating the accuracy of behavioral models still often relies on offline comparisons to static trajectory statistics. Here we introduce a reinforcement-learning-based framework that uses a biomimetic robotic fish (RoboFish) to evaluate computational models of live fish behavior through closed-loop interaction. We trained policies in simulation using four distinct fish models-a simple constant-follow baseline, two rule-based models, and a biologically grounded convolutional neural network model-and transferred these policies to the real RoboFish setup, where they interacted with live fish. Policies were trained to guide a simulated fish to goal locations, enabling us to quantify how the response of real fish differs from the simulated fish's response. We evaluate the fish models by quantifying the sim-to-real gaps, defined as the Wasserstein distance between simulated and real distributions of behavioral metrics such as goal-reaching performance, inter-individual distances, wall interactions, and alignment. The neural network-based fish model exhibited the smallest gap across goal-reaching performance and most other metrics, indicating higher behavioral fidelity than conventional rule-based models under this benchmark. More importantly, this separation shows that the proposed evaluation can quantitatively distinguish candidate models under matched closed-loop conditions. Our work demonstrates how learning-based robotic experiments can uncover deficiencies in behavioral models and provides a general framework for evaluating animal behavior models through embodied interaction.


Source: arXiv:2604.07303v1 - http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07303v1 PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2604.07303v1 Original Link: http://arxiv.org/abs/2604.07303v1

Submission:4/9/2026
Comments:0 comments
Subjects:Robotics; Robotics
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arXiv: This paper is hosted on arXiv, an open-access repository
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Robots that learn to evaluate models of collective behavior | Researchia