MSR Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Monocular Depth Reconstruction using Geometry and Deep Networks

NSH 1507

In this thesis, we explore methods of building dense depth map from monocular video. First, we introduce our multi-view stereo pipeline, which utilizes photometric bundle adjustment for getting accurate depth of textured regions from small motion video. Second, we improve the depth estimation of low-texture region by fusing deep convolutional network predictions. We categorize the [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning Depth from Monocular Videos using Direct Methods

GHC 7101

The ability to predict depth from a single image - using recent advances in CNNs - is of increasing interest to the vision community. Unsupervised strategies to learning are particularly appealing as they can utilize much larger and varied monocular video datasets during learning without the need for ground truth depth or stereo. In previous works, separate pose and [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning-based Lane Following and Changing Behaviors for Autonomous Vehicle

NSH A507

This thesis explores learning-based methods in generating human-like lane following and changing behaviors in on-road autonomous driving. We summarize our main contributions as: 1) derive an efficient vision-based end-to-end learning system for on-road driving; 2) propose a novel attention-based learning architecture with sub-action space to obtain lane changing behavior using a deep reinforcement learning algorithm; [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Real-to-Virtual Domain Unification for End-to-End Autonomous Driving

NSH 1505

Abstract: In the spectrum of vision-based autonomous driving, vanilla end-to-end models are not interpretable and suboptimal in performance, while mediated perception models require additional intermediate representations such as segmentation masks or detection bounding boxes, whose annotation can be prohibitively expensive as we move to a larger scale. More critically, all prior works fail to deal with the notorious [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Reconstruction of dynamic vehicles from multiple unsynchronized cameras

NSH 4201

Despite significant research in the area, reconstruction of multiple dynamic rigid objects (eg. vehicles) observed from wide-baseline, uncalibrated and unsynchronized cameras, remains hard. On one hand, feature tracking works well within each view but is hard to correspond across multiple cameras with limited overlap in fields of view or due to occlusions. On the other [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Ergodic Coverage and Active Search in Constrained Environments

GHC 6501

In this thesis, we explore sampling-based trajectory optimization applied to search for objects of interest in constrained environments (e.g., a UAV searching for a target in the presence of obstacles). We consider two search scenarios: in the first scenario, accurate prior information distribution of the possible locations of the objects of interest is available, thus [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Understanding Machine Vision through Human Vision

GHC 4405

Abstract: Recent success in machine vision has been largely driven by advanced computer vision methods, most commonly known as deep learning based methods. While we have seen tremendous performance improvements in machine visual tasks, such as object categorization and segmentation, there remain two major issues in deep learning. Firstly, deep networks have been largely unable [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Automated design, accessible fabrication, and learning-based control on cable-driven soft robots with complex shapes

NSH 3001

The emerging field of soft robots has shown great potential to outperform their rigid counterparts due to the soft and safe nature and the capability of performing complex and compliant motions. Many are built, but the designs are conservative and limited to regular shapes. The widely-used fabrication method contains bulky pumps, tethered tubings, and silicone [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

What can this robot do? Learning Capability Models from Appearance and Experiments

NSH 3002

As autonomous robots become increasingly multifunctional and adaptive, it becomes difficult to determine the extent of their capabilities, i.e. the tasks they can perform and their strengths and limitations at these tasks. A robot's appearance can provide cues to its physical as well as cognitive capabilities. We present an algorithm that builds on these cues [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Robust State Estimation for Micro Aerial Vehicles

NSH 1305

Title: Robust State Estimation for Micro Aerial Vehicles Autonomous robots provide excellent tools for information gathering in a wide variety of domains, from environmental management to infrastructure inspection and search and rescue. Micro aerial vehicles, in particular, offer a high degree of mobil- ity that can further their effectiveness in such environments. Deployment of aerial [...]