Learning on the Move: Integrating Action and Perception for Mobile Manipulation - Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
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MSR Thesis Defense

May

21
Tue
Shagun Uppal MSR Student Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University
Tuesday, May 21
1:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Newell-Simon Hall 4305
Learning on the Move: Integrating Action and Perception for Mobile Manipulation
Abstract:
While there has been remarkable progress recently in the fields of manipulation and locomotion, mobile manipulation remains a long-standing challenge. Compared to locomotion or static manipulation, a mobile system must make a diverse range of long-horizon tasks feasible in unstructured and dynamic environments. While the applications are broad and interesting, there are a plethora of challenges in developing these systems such as coordination between the base and arm, reliance on onboard perception for perceiving and interacting with the environment, and most importantly, simultaneously integrating all these parts together.

Prior works approach the problem using disentangled modular skills for mobility and manipulation that are trivially tied together. This causes several limitations such as compounding errors, delays in decision-making, and no whole-body coordination. In this work, we present a reactive mobile manipulation framework that uses an active visual system to consciously perceive and react to its environment.

Similar to how humans leverage whole-body and hand-eye coordination, we develop a mobile manipulator that exploits its ability to move and see, more specifically — to move in order to see and to see in order to move.  This allows it to not only move around and interact with its environment but also, choose “when” to perceive “what” using an active visual system.  We observe that such an agent learns to navigate around complex cluttered scenarios while displaying agile whole-body coordination using only ego-vision without needing to create environment maps.

Project Page: https://spin-robot.github.io/

Committee:
Prof. Deepak Pathak (advisor)
Prof. Katerina Fragkiadaki
Ananye Agarwal