Student Talks
Carnegie Mellon University
Direct-drive Hands: Making Robot Hands Transparent and Reactive to Contacts
Abstract: Industrial manipulators and end-effectors are a vital driver of the automation revolution. These robot hands, designed to reject disturbances with stiffness and strength, are inferior to their human counterparts. Human hands are dexterous and nimble effectors capable of a variety of interactions with the environment. Through this thesis we wish to answer a question: [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
MSR Thesis Talk – Vivek Roy
Title: Smartphone localization for Indoor Pedestrian Navigation Abstract: Global positioning system (GPS) interfacing with applications such as Google Maps has proven very useful for navigation in outdoor open settings. However in crowded metropolitan environments with high rise buildings or in indoor settings, GPS quickly becomes unreliable. Using sensors found on commodity smartphones to perform accurate [...]
Manipulating Objects with Challenging Visual and Geometric Properties
Abstract: Object manipulation is a well-studied domain in robotics, yet manipulation remains difficult for objects with visually and geometrically challenging properties. Visually challenging properties, such as transparency and specularity, break assumptions of Lambertian reflectance that existing methods rely on for grasp estimation. On the other hand, deformable objects such as cloth pose both visual and [...]
TIGRIS: An Informed Sampling-based Algorithm for Informative Path Planning
Abstract: In this talk I will present our sampling-based approach to informative path planning that allows us to tackle the challenges of large and high-dimensional search spaces. This is done by performing informed sampling in the high-dimensional continuous space and incorporating potential information gain along edges in the reward estimation. This method rapidly generates a [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
MSR Thesis Talk – Zhe Huang
Title: Distributed Reinforcement Learning for Autonomous Driving Abstract: Due to the complex and safety-critical nature of autonomous driving, recent works typically test their ideas on simulators designed for the very purpose of advancing self-driving research. Despite the convenience of modeling autonomous driving as a trajectory optimization problem, few of these methods resort to online reinforcement [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
MSR Thesis Talk- Xinjie Yao
Title: Ride Comfort-Aware Visual Navigation via Self-Supervised Learning Abstract: Under shared autonomy, wheelchair users expect vehicles to provide safe and comfortable rides while following users’ high-level navigation plans. To find such a path, vehicles negotiate with different terrains and assess their traversal difficulty. Most prior works model surroundings either through geometric representations or semantic classifications, [...]
MS Thesis Talk – Shun Iwase
Title: Fast 6D Object Pose Refinement via Deep Texture Rendering Abstract: We present RePOSE, a fast iterative refinement method for 6D object pose estimation. Prior methods perform refinement by feeding zoomed-in input and rendered RGB images into a CNN and directly regressing an update of a refined pose. Their runtime is slow due to the [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Resource-Constrained Learning and Inference for Visual Perception
Abstract: We have witnessed rapid advancement across major computer vision benchmarks over the past years. However, the top solutions' hidden computation cost prevents them from being practically deployable. For example, training large models until convergence may be prohibitively expensive in practice, and autonomous driving or augmented reality may require a reaction time that rivals that [...]
Trajectory Optimization for Thermally-Actuated Soft Planar Robot Limbs
Abstract: Practical use of robotic manipulators made from soft materials requires generating and executing complex motions. We present the first approach for generating trajectories of a thermally-actuated soft robotic manipulator. Based on simplified approximations of the soft arm and its antagonistic shape-memory alloy actuator coils, we justify a dynamics model of a discretized rigid manipulator [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Physical Interaction and Manipulation of the Environment using Aerial Robots
Abstract: The physical interaction of aerial robots with their environment has countless potential applications and is an emerging area with many open challenges. Fully-actuated multirotors have been introduced to tackle some of these challenges. They provide complete control over position and orientation and eliminate the need for attaching a multi-DoF manipulation arm to the robot. [...]