RI Seminar
Heni Ben Amor
Assistant Professor
Interactive Robotics Laboratory, Arizona State University

Human-Robot Interactive Collaboration & Communication

Abstract: Autonomous and anthropomorphic robots are poised to play a critical role in manufacturing, healthcare and the services industry in the near future. However, for this vision to become a reality, robots need to efficiently communicate and interact with their human partners. Rather than traditional remote controls and programming languages, adaptive and transparent techniques for [...]

RI Seminar
Principal Systems Scientist / Director, NREC
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Robots “R” Us: 25 years of Robotics Technology Development and Commercialization at NREC

Abstract: Since its founding in 1979, the Robotics Institute (RI) at Carnegie Mellon University has been leading the world in robotics research and education. In the mid 1990s, RI created NREC as the applied R&D center within the Institute with a specific mission to apply robotics technology in an impactful way on real-world applications. In this talk, I will go over [...]

RI Seminar
Rohan Paul
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science & Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

Towards an Intelligence Architecture for Human-Robot Teaming

Abstract: Advances in autonomy are enabling intelligent robotic systems to enter human-centric environments like factories, homes and workplaces. To be effective as a teammate, we expect robots to accomplish more than performing simplistic repetitive tasks; they must perceive, reason, perform semantic tasks in a human-like way. A robot's ability to act intelligently is fundamentally tied [...]

RI Seminar
Assistant Professor
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

GANs for Everyone

Abstract:  The power and promise of deep generative models such as StyleGAN, CycleGAN, and GauGAN lie in their ability to synthesize endless realistic, diverse, and novel content with user controls. Unfortunately, the creation and deployment of these large-scale models demand high-performance computing platforms, large-scale annotated datasets, and sophisticated knowledge of deep learning methods. This makes [...]

RI Seminar
Avik De
Co-founder & CTO
Ghost Robotics

Design and control of insect-scale bees and dog-scale quadrupeds

Abstract: Enhanced robot autonomy---whether it be in the context of extended tether-free flight of a 100mg insect-scale flapping-wing micro aerial vehicle (FWMAV), or long inspection routes for a quadrupedal robot---is hindered by fundamental constraints in power and computation. With this motivation, I will discuss a few projects I have worked on to circumvent these issues in [...]

RI Seminar
Cynthia Sung
Assistant Professor
Mechanical Engineering & Applied Mechanics, University of Pennsylvania

Dynamical Robots via Origami-Inspired Design

Abstract: Origami-inspired engineering produces structures with high strength-to-weight ratios and simultaneously lower manufacturing complexity. This reliable, customizable, cheap fabrication and component assembly technology is ideal for robotics applications in remote, rapid deployment scenarios that require platforms to be quickly produced, reconfigured, and deployed. Unfortunately, most examples of folded robots are appropriate only for small-scale, low-load [...]

RI Seminar
Andrew E. Johnson
Principal Robotics Systems Engineer
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

The Search for Ancient Life on Mars Began with a Safe Landing

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Prior mars rover missions have all landed in flat and smooth regions, but for the Mars 2020 mission, which is seeking signs of ancient life, this was no longer acceptable. To maximize the variety of rock samples that will eventually be returned to earth for analysis, the Perseverance rover needed to land in a [...]

RI Seminar
Systems Scientist
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Robotic Cave Exploration for Search, Science, and Survey

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Robotic cave exploration has the potential to create significant societal impact through facilitating search and rescue, in the fight against antibiotic resistance (science), and via mapping (survey). But many state-of-the-art approaches for active perception and autonomy in subterranean environments rely on disparate perceptual pipelines (e.g., pose estimation, occupancy modeling, hazard detection) that process the same underlying sensor data in [...]

RI Seminar
Thomas Howard
Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Electrical & Computer Engineering, University of Rochester

Enabling Grounded Language Communication for Human-Robot Teaming

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract:  The ability for robots to effectively understand natural language instructions and convey information about their observations and interactions with the physical world is highly dependent on the sophistication and fidelity of the robot’s representations of language, environment, and actions.  As we progress towards more intelligent systems that perform a wider range of tasks in a [...]

RI Seminar
Matthew Walter
Assistant Professor
Robot Intelligence through Perception Lab (RIPL), Toyota Technological Institute at Chicago

Robots that Learn through Language

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Advances in perception have been integral to transitioning robots from machines restricted to factory automation to autonomous agents that operate robustly in unstructured environments. As our surrogates, robots enable people to explore the deepest depths of the ocean and distant regions of space, making discoveries that would otherwise be impossible. The age of robots [...]