RI Seminar
Deanna Gates
Assistant Professor
University of Michigan

Optimizing ankle prostheses to improve walking in transtibial amputees

NSH 1305

Abstract: With a prosthetic device, people with a lower limb amputation can remain physically active, but most do not achieve medically recommended physical activity standards and are therefore at a greater risk of obesity and cardiovascular disease. Their reduced activity may be attributed to the 10 - 30% increase in energetic cost during walking compared [...]

RI Seminar
Alan R. Wagner
Assistant Professor of Aerospace Engineering
Penn State University

Exploring Human-Robot Trust during Emergencies

NSH 1305

Abstract: This talk presents our experimental results related to human-robot trust involving more than 2000 paid subjects exploring topics such as how and why people trust a robot too much and how broken trust in a robot might be repaired. From our perspective, a person trusts a robot when they rely on and accept the [...]

RI Seminar
Greg Mori
Professor
School of Computer Science, Simon Fraser University

Deep Structured Models for Human Activity Recognition

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Visual recognition involves reasoning about structured relations at multiple levels of detail.  For example, human behaviour analysis requires a comprehensive labeling covering individual low-level actions to pair-wise interactions through to high-level events.  Scene understanding can benefit from considering labels and their inter-relations.  In this talk I will present recent work by our group building [...]

RI Seminar
David Breen
Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science, Drexel University

Level Set Models for Computer Graphics

1305 Newell Simon Hall

ABSTRACT A level set model is a deformable implicit model that has a regularly-sampled representation.  It is defined as an iso-contour, i.e. a level set, of some implicit function f.  The contour is deformed by solving a partial differential equation on a sampling of f, an image in 2D and a volume dataset in 3D.  [...]

RI Seminar
Prof. Dr.-Ing. Michael Goesele
Professor
Graphics, Capture and Massively Parallel Computing , Technische Universität Darmstadt

“Does it look right? – Why capture and reconstruction quality really matter.”

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Special RI Seminar Please Note Different Day and Time Abstract:  At first sight, 3D reconstruction can be considered a solved problem. The principles are well understood and we can reconstruct a wide range of objects and scenes using active as well as passive reconstruction approached. However, most of these reconstructions are not convincing when really [...]

RI Seminar
Frank Dellaert
Technical Project Lead at Building 8
Facebook

Factor Graphs and Automatic Differentiation for Flexible Inference in Robotics and Vision

1305 Newell Simon Hall

PLEASE NOTE: THIS SEMINAR WILL NOT BE RECORDED Abstract: Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM) and Structure from Motion (SFM) are important and closely related problems in robotics and vision. I will review how SLAM, SFM and other problems in robotics and vision can be posed in terms of factor graphs, which provide a graphical language [...]

RI Seminar
Magnus Egerstedt
Professor and Executive Director
Institute for Robotics and Intelligent Machines , Georgia Institute of Technology

Long Duration Autonomy With Applications to Persistent Environmental Monitoring

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: By now, we have a fairly good understanding of how to design coordinated control strategies for making teams of mobile robots achieve geometric objectives in a distributed manner, such as assembling shapes or covering areas. But, the mapping from high-level tasks to geometric objectives is not well understood. In this talk, we investigate this [...]