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H-index

"The index is calculated based on the distribution of citations received by a given researcher's publications. Hirsch writes:

A scientist has index h if h of his/her Np papers have at least h citations each, and the other (Np - h) papers have at most h citations each. In other words, a scholar with an index of h has published h papers with at least h citations each.[1] The index is designed to improve upon simple measures such as the total number of citations or publications, to distinguish truly influential physicists from those who simply publish many papers; the index is also less sensitive to single papers that have many citations. " (WIKIPEDIA)

Frederic Kaplan's H-index based on Google Scholar is : 15 (October 2007)
(13
(October 2006))

Papers are :

1. Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. (2000) AIBO's first words, the social learning of language and meaning, Evolution of Communication, 4 (1): 3--32. 117 (2006) > (137)

2.
Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. and McIntyre, A. and Van Looveren, J. (2002) Crucial factors in the origins of word-meaning In Wray, A., editor, The Transition to Language, p. 252-271, Oxford University Press. Oxford, UK. 103 (2006) > (109)

3.
Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. Stochasticity as a Source of Innovation in Language Games. In Adami, C. and Belew, R. and Kitano, H. and Taylor, C., editor, Proceedings of Artificial Life VI, pages 368-376, Cambridge, MA, June 1998. The MIT Press.77 (2006) > (77)

4.
Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. (2002) Bootstrapping grounded word semantics. In Briscoe,T. Linguistic evolution through language acquisition: formal and computational models, p. 53-73, Cambdrige University Press, Cambridge, UK. 54 (2006) > (63)

5.
Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. Situated grounded word semantics. In Dean, T., editor, Proceedings of the Sixteenth International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence IJCAI'99, pages 862-867, San Francisco, CA., 1999. Morgan Kaufmann Publishers.51 (2006) > (54)

6.
Kaplan, F. and Hafner, V.V. The challenges of joint attention, Interaction Studies, 2006, 50 (2006) > (54)

7.
Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. Collective learning and semiotic dynamics. In Floreano, D. and Nicoud, J-D and Mondada, F., editor, Advances in Artificial Life (ECAL 99), Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence 1674, pages 679-688, Berlin, 1999. Springer-Verlag. 37 (2006) > (41)

8. Steels, L. and Kaplan, F. Spontaneous Lexicon Change. Proceedings of COLING-ACL 1998, pages 1243-1249, Montreal, August 1998. ACL. 25 (2006) > (26)


9. Kaplan, F., Oudeyer, P-Y., Kubinyi, E. and Miklosi, A. (2002) Robotic clicker training, Robotics and Autonomous Systems, 38(3-4):197-206. 21 (2006) > (28)

10. Kaplan, F. Talking AIBO : First experimentation of verbal interactions with an autonomous four-legged robot. In Nijholt, A. and Heylen, D. and Jokinen, K., editor, Learning to Behave: Interacting agents CELE-TWENTE Workshop on Language Technology, pages 57-63, October 2000. 17 (2006) > (21)

11.
Kaplan, F. and Oudeyer, P-Y. Motivational principles for visual know-how development. In Prince, C.G., Berthouze, L. Kozima, H. Bullock, D. Stojanov, G. and Balkenius, C. (eds) Proceedings of the 3rd Epigenetic Robotics workshop : Modeling cognitive development in robotic systems,p 72-80, Lund University Cognitive Studies 101, 2003. 17 (2006) > (21)

12, Oudeyer, P-Y. and Kaplan, F. Intelligent Adaptive Curiosity: a source of self-development, Epirob 2004 (18)

13. Kaplan, F. and Oudeyer, P-Y. Maximizing learning progress: an internal reward system for development (16)

14. Kaplan, F. A New Approach to Class Formation in Multi-Agent Simulations of Language Evolution. In Demazeau, Y., editor, Proceedings of the third international conference on multi-agent systems (ICMAS 98), pages 158-165, Los Alamitos, CA, 1998. IEEE Computer Society 16 (2006) > (16)

15. Kaplan. F. La naissance d'une langue chez les robots, Hermes, 2001, 14 (2006) > (15)

16. Kaplan. F, L'emergence d'un lexiaue dans une population d'agents autonomes, These de Doctorat Paris 6, 2000, (15)