Special Talk
Joydeep Biswas
Assistant Professor
College of Information and Computer Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Special Talk: Building Robots For Long-Term Autonomy, And Keeping Them Autonomous

GHC 6115

Abstract: We seek the ultimate goal of having self-sufficient autonomous service mobile robots working in human environments, performing tasks accurately and robustly.  Successfully deploying such robots requires simultaneously addressing challenges in a number of subproblems spanning the complete perception-cognition-actuation stack. In this talk, I shall present our recent research along two broad themes: algorithms for [...]

Special Talk
Jia Deng
Assistant Professor
Computer Science and Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Speaker: Jia Deng

GHC 4405

Areas of Interest: Artificial Intelligence, vision, knowledge, reasoning Host: Abhinav Gupta Admin Contact: Chris Downey cdowney@andrew.cmu.edu

Special Talk
Dr. Yan Ke
founder and CTO of
Colbotics

Fully Autonomous Drones for Wind Power Turbine Inspection

3305 Newell-Simon Hall

Abstract: The wind energy industry is growing rapidly. In the U.S. alone, the wind industry invested more than $11 billion in new plants in 2017 and added more than 7,000 megawatts of new capacity, representing 25% of all electric capacity added. One of the biggest challenges to growth remains the high costs of constructing wind [...]

Special Talk
Tesca Fitzgerald
PhD candidate
Computer Science, Georgia Tech College of Computing

Human-guided Task Transfer for Interactive Robots

GATES-HILLMAN 4405

Abstract: Adaptability is an essential skill in human cognition, enabling us to draw from our extensive, life-long experiences with various objects and tasks in order to address novel problems. To date, most robots do not have this kind of adaptability, and yet, as our expectations of robots’ interactive and assistive capacity grows, it will be [...]

Special Talk
Zac Manchester
Assistant Professor
Stanford University

Numerical Methods for Things That Move: From Quadrupeds to Starships

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

Abstract:  Recent advances in motion planning and control have led to dramatic successes like SpaceX’s rocket landings and Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot acrobatics. However, the underlying numerical methods used in these applications are typically decades old, not tuned for high performance on planning and control problems, and are often unable to cope with the types [...]

Special Talk
Associate Professor
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Five Traps for Robots in Human Environments….And How to Avoid Them

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

Abstract:  Robotics today is moving beyond fixed environments and into human spaces like homes, restaurants, and hospitals. In these new spaces, robots will necessarily have to interact with people. In some sense, every recent robotics problem is partly a human-robot interaction problem. Thus, the field of HRI can offer insights to the broader robotics community [...]

Special Talk
Senior Systems Scientist
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Making AI trustworthy and understandable by clinicians

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

Abstract:  Understandable-AI techniques facilitate to use of AI as a tool by human experts, giving humans insight into how AI decisions are made thereby helping experts discern which AI predictions should or shouldn’t be trusted.  Understandable techniques may be especially useful for applications with insufficient validation data for regulatory approval, for which human experts must remain the final decision [...]

Special Talk
Assistant Professor
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Perceiving Objects and Interactions in 3D

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

Abstract: We observe and interact with myriad of objects in our everyday lives, from cups and bottles to hammers and tennis rackets. In this talk, I will outline our group’s efforts towards understanding these objects and our everyday interactions with them in 3D. I will first focus on scaling 3D prediction for isolated objects across [...]

Special Talk
Chris Timperley
Senior System Scientist
Software and Societal Systems Department (S3D), Carnegie Mellon University

Special RI Seminar

NSH 4305

Title: Testing, Analysis, and Specification for Robust and Reliable Robot Software Abstract: Building robust and reliable robotic software is an inherently challenging feat that requires substantial expertise across a variety of disciplines. Despite that, writing robot software has never been easier thanks to software frameworks such as ROS: At its best, ROS allows newcomers to assemble simple, [...]