MSR Thesis Defense
MSR Thesis Talk: Yuyao Shi
Title: A Learning Approach to Understand How Spinal Cord Learns Multiple Behaviors Abstract: The spinal cord plays a crucial role in the control of human locomotion, generating motor patterns and coordinating reflex responses to sensory signals. Although this spinal control is traditionally viewed as a simple relay system, more recent neurophysiological evidence points to a [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
MSR Thesis Talk: FNU Abhimanyu
Title: Improving Robotic Ultrasound AI Using Optical Flow Abstract: Ultrasound is an important modality for medical intervention such as vascular access because it is safe, portable, and low-cost. However, ultrasound scanning requires trained sonographers who are scarce, and it can be challenging to perform ultrasound examinations in disaster or battlefield scenarios. This motivates us to automate [...]
MSR Thesis Talk: Lucas Casanova De Oliveira Nogueira
Title: SuperLoop: a LIDAR-based SLAM Back-end for Underground Exploration Abstract: Robots deployed in underground scenarios require a SLAM system that can handle a variety of challenges, such as the absence of GPS, large scale maps, bad illumination, and geometrically degenerate environments. It is nearly impossible for any SLAM solution to handle all these challenges perfectly, specially [...]
MSR Thesis Talk: Neil Khera
Title: PyCubed-Mini: A Low-Cost, Open-Source Satellite Research Platform Abstract: Satellite development has become more accessible with decreasing launch costs and shrinking hardware. However, the expenses associated with pre-built satellite kits remain high, making it difficult for student and hobbyist teams to participate. The lack of standardized satellite hardware and software further adds to the challenge, [...]
Strategy assessment for solving rich physical problems
Abstract: We present a framework that acts as an "intuitive physics reasoner" which takes in strategies expressed in natural language (whether from a human or LLM), and assesses their validity based on a physics knowledge library. We believe the ability to quickly determine whether a strategy is worth considering and allocating further resources to planning [...]
MSR Thesis Talk: Siva Kailas
Title: Multi-Robot Information Gathering for Spatiotemporal Environment Modelling Abstract: Learning to predict or forecast spatiotemporal (ST) environmental processes from a sparse set of samples collected autonomously is a difficult task from both a sampling perspective (collecting the best sparse samples) and from a learning perspective (predicting unseen locations or forecasting the next timestep). We investigate [...]
MRS Thesis Talk: Ruijie Fu
Title: Towards Mechanical Communication in Multi-Agent Locomotive Systems: Principally Kinematic Robots on a Shared Platform Abstract: Many biological multi-agent systems exhibit a mechanism for information exchange among individuals known as mechanical communication, which leads to the emergence of collective behavior within the group. One such example is the swarming behavior of bacteria, where they form rafts [...]
Architecture and Algorithms for Space-Based Global Wildlife Tracking
Abstract: Accurate satellite based positioning revolutionized several industries over the past two decades from agriculture to transportation. However, conventional GNSS receivers consume significant amounts of energy and are too large for many applications, including wildlife-tracking which is critical for conservation efforts and improving our understanding of the global climate. To address this capability gap, we [...]
Language-Conditioned Object Detection and Manipulation
Abstract: Traditional object detection methods are often confined to predefined object vocabularies, limiting their versatility in real-world scenarios where robots need to understand and execute diverse household tasks. Additionally, the 2D and 3D perception communities have typically pursued separate approaches tailored to their respective domains. In this thesis, we present a language-conditioned object detector with [...]
Exploring Diverse Interaction Types for Human in the Loop Robot Learning
Abstract: Teaching sessions between humans and robots will need to be maximally informative for optimal robot learning and to ease the human’s teaching burden. However, the bulk of prior work considers one or two modalities through which a human can convey information to a robot—namely, kinesthetic demonstrations and preference queries. Moreover, people will teach robots [...]