Student Talks
MSR Thesis Talk – Swaminathan Gurumurthy
Title: Improving generalization in data-driven models with task-specific knowledge Abstract: With the rise of the over-parameterized deep learning models and massive datasets, many have started advocating towards minimizing the amount of prior knowledge added to a learning model. Ironically, the traditional machine learning community advocated for exactly the opposite. Whereas the latter assumes knowledge of [...]
MRSD Annual Poster Presentation
Nine RI MRSD program student teams will use posters, videos, and hardware to show their project work on truck crash avoidance, balance recovery, construction via UAVs, room tidying, crop disease detection, beach cleaning, temperature field sensing, UGV-UAV firefighting, and multirover moon pit modeling. Website: https://mrsd.ri.cmu.edu/project-examples/student-project-websites/spring-2019-fall-2019/
Adaptive Planning and Control of Wheeled Mobile Robots in Challenging Environments
Abstract: Over the last two decades, we have seen driverless cars conquer the Mojave desert, drive on mars and operate on our streets and warehouses. One of the most fundamental requirements of such robots is their ability to navigate their environment with minimal human oversight. As more robots graduate from the confines of laboratories to [...]
When to use CNNs for Inverse Problems in Vision
Abstract: Reconstruction tasks in computer vision aim fundamentally to recover an undetermined signal from a set of noisy measurements. Examples include super-resolution, image denoising, and non-rigid structure from motion\cite{Kong_2019}, all of which have seen recent advancements through deep learning. However, earlier work made extensive use of sparse signal reconstruction frameworks (e.g. convolutional sparse coding). While [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Learning Dense 3D Object Reconstruction without Geometric Supervision
Abstract: Geometric alignment across visual data has been the fundamental issue for effective and efficient computer vision algorithms. The established pixel correspondences between images indirectly infer the underlying 3D geometry, physically or semantically. While this builds the foundation of classical multi-view 3D reconstruction algorithms such as Structure from Motion (SfM) and Simultaneous Localization and Mapping [...]
Tendon Driven Foam Hands
Abstract: There has been great progress in soft robot design, manufacture, and control in recent years, and soft robots are a tool of choice for safe and robust handling of objects in conditions of uncertainty. Still, dexterous in-hand manipulation using soft robots remains a challenge. This talk introduces a novel class of soft robots in [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Towards a Good Representation For Reinforcement Learning
Abstract: Deep reinforcement learning has achieved many successes over the recent years. However, its high sample complexity and the difficulty in specifying a reward function have limited its application. In this talk, I will take a representation learning perspective towards these issues. Is it possible to map from the raw observation, potentially in high dimension, [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Eye Gaze for Assistive Manipulation
Abstract: Full robot autonomy is the traditional goal of robotics research. To work in a human-inhabited world, however, robots will often need to collaborate with humans. Many scenarios require human users to teleoperate robots to perform tasks, a paradigm that appears everywhere from space exploration, to disaster recovery, to assistive robotics. This collaboration enables tasks [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Stability-Centric Mechanics for Rigid Body Manipulation
Abstract: The repertoire of human manipulation is filled with creative use of contacts to move the object about the hand and the environment. It’s the combination of these skills that makes human manipulation dexterous. However, in most robotic applications the robot just fix all contact points on the object and do grasping. Reliable robot manipulation [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Combining Multiple Heuristics: Studies on Neighborhood-base Heuristics and Sampling-based Heuristics
Abstract: This thesis centers on the topic of how to automatically combine multiple heuristics. For most computationally challenging problems, there exist multiple heuristics, and it is generally the case that any such heuristic exploits only a limited number of aspects among all the possible problem characteristics that we can think of, and by definition, is [...]