Student Talks
Carnegie Mellon University
Heuristics for routing and scheduling of Spatio-temporal type problems in industrial environments
Abstract: Spatio-temporal problems are fairly common in industrial environments. In practice, these problems come with different characteristics and are often very hard to solve optimally. So, practitioners prefer to develop heuristics that exploit mathematical structure specific to the problem for obtaining good performance. In this thesis, we will present work on heuristics for 3 different [...]
Computational Light Transport with Interferometry
Abstract: Optical interferometry is the measurement of small, sub-wavelength distances by exploiting the wave nature of light. Due to its capability to resolve micron-scale displacements, it has found widespread applications in biomedical imaging, industrial fabrication, physics, and astrophysics. In this thesis, we introduce a set of techniques we call computational interferometry, that bring the benefits [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
3D Reconstruction using Differential Imaging
Abstract: 3D reconstruction has been at the core of many computer vision applications, including autonomous driving, visual inspection in manufacturing, and augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR). Despite the tremendous progress made over the years, there remain challenging open-research problems. This thesis addresses three such problems in 3D reconstruction. First, we address the problem of defocus [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Beyond rigid objects: Data-driven Methods for Manipulation of Deformable Objects
Abstract: Manipulation of deformable objects challenges common assumptions made for rigid objects. Deformable objects have high intrinsic state representation and complex dynamics with high degrees of freedom, making it difficult for state estimation and planning. The completed work can be divided into two parts. In the first part, we explore reinforcement learning (RL) as a [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Simulation, Perception, and Generation of Human Behavior
Abstract: Understanding and modeling human behavior is fundamental to almost any computer vision and robotics applications that involve humans. In this thesis, we take a holistic approach to human behavior modeling and tackle its three essential aspects --- simulation, perception, and generation. Throughout this thesis, we show how the three aspects are deeply connected and [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Structured Learning for Robust Robot Manipulation
Abstract: Robust and generalizable robots that can autonomously manipulate objects in semi-structured environments can bring material benefits to society. Data-driven learning approaches are crucial for enabling such systems by identifying and exploiting patterns in semi-structured environments, allowing robots to adapt to novel scenarios with minimal human supervision. However, despite significant prior work in learning for [...]
An Experimental Design Perspective on Model-Based Reinforcement Learning
Abstract: In many practical applications of RL, it is expensive to observe state transitions from the environment. For example, in the problem of plasma control for nuclear fusion, computing the next state for a given state-action pair requires querying an expensive transition function which can lead to many hours of computer simulation or dollars of [...]
Learning Model Preconditions for Planning with Multiple Models
Abstract: Different models can provide differing levels of fidelity when a robot is planning. Analytical models are often fast to evaluate but only work in limited ranges of conditions. Meanwhile, physics simulators are effective at modeling complex interactions between objects but are typically more computationally expensive. Learning when to switch between the various models can [...]
Simulation-based Planning for Pick-and-Place in Heavy Clutter using Non-prehensile Manipulation
Abstract: Robot manipulation in domestic households, industrial manufacturing and warehouses might require contact-rich interactions with objects in the environment. For pick-and-place style grasping tasks in cluttered scenes, it can be more economical for the robot to rely on non-prehensile actions vis-à-vis deliberate prehensile rearrangement. Non-prehensile actions also let the robot manipulate large and bulky objects [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Relationships in instance segmentation and anomaly detection
Abstract: This thesis primarily covers work on two different tasks in computer vision: (1) anomaly detection and (2) instance segmentation. Anomaly detection is an underexplored unsupervised problem that has existed in many fields. On the other hand, instance (and panoptic) segmentation is a supervised problem that can leverage the powerful data and key developments from [...]