Student Talks
Carnegie Mellon University
In-Field Robotic Leaf Grasping and Automated Crop Spectroscopy
Agricultural robotics is a growing field of intelligent automation that is proving to drastically increase the speed and reliability of in-field tasks such as precision seed planting, harvesting, field mapping, and crop monitoring. More specifically, plant breeders are beginning to use robotic systems to record the physical traits of crops throughout the growing season at [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Soft-matter Artificial Muscle by Electrochemical Surface Oxidation of Liquid Metal
Natural muscles, a result of more than 500 millions years of evolution, are elegant machines that generate force and motion electrochemically. The brief history of robotics does not have the luxury of millions of years to reverse-engineer many aspects of life. The development of artificial muscles therefore seeks to build more muscle-like actuators for robots. [...]
Radiation Source Localization using a Gamma-ray Camera
Radiation source localization is a common and critical task across applications such as nuclear facility decommissioning, radioactive disaster response, and security. Traditional count-based sensors (e.g. Geiger counters) infer range to the source based on the observed number of gamma photons, expected source strength, and assumed intermediate attenuation from the environment. In cluttered 3D settings, such [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Improving Imitation Learning through Efficient Expert Querying
Learning from demonstration is an intuitive approach to encoding complex behaviors in autonomous agents. Learners have shown success in challenging tasks like autonomous driving, aerial obstacle avoidance, and information gathering, through observation and mimicry alone. State of the art algorithms like Dataset Aggregation (DAgger) have made significant advances over traditional behavior cloning, demonstrating strong theoretical [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Provably Optimal Design of a Brain-Computer Interface
Abstract: Brain-computer interfaces are in the process of moving from the laboratory to the clinic. These devices act by reading neural activity and using it to directly control a device, such as a cursor on a computer screen. Over the past two decades, much attention has been devoted to the decoding problem: how should recorded [...]
Failure Is an Option: How the Severity of Robot Errors Affects Human-Robot Interactions
Abstract: Just as humans are imperfect, even the best of robots will eventually fail at performing a task. The likelihood of failure increases as robots expand their roles in our lives. Although task failure is a common problem in robotics and human-robot interaction (HRI), there has been little research investigating human tolerance to said failures, [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Extensions of the Principal Fiber Bundle Model for Locomoting Robots
Abstract: Our goal is to establish a rigorous formulation for modeling the locomotion of a broad class of robotic systems. Recent research has identifi ed a number of systems with the structure of a principal fiber bundle. This framework has led to a number of tools for analysis and motion planning applicable to various robotic [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Scaling up Self-Supervision for Robot Learning
Abstract: A general purpose robot will need to interact with objects in cluttered environments with minimal supervision. Machine learning provides methods that can deal with these complex tasks without explicitly modelling the environment. More recently, deep learning techniques combined with large scale data has revolutionized the fields of computer vision, language processing and reinforcement learning. [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Safe Data Gathering in Physical Spaces
Abstract: Reliable and efficient acquisition of data from physical spaces has widespread applications in industry, policy, defense, and humanitarian work. Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are an excellent choice for data gathering applications, due to their capability of gaining information at multiple scales. A robust data gathering system needs to reason about multi-resolution nature of information [...]
Carnegie Mellon University
Robot Learning in Homes – Improving Generalization and Reducing Dataset Bias
Abstract: Data-driven approaches to solving robotic tasks have gained a lot of traction in recent years. However, most existing policies are trained on large-scale datasets collected in curated lab settings. If we aim to deploy these models in unstructured visual environments like people’s homes, they will be unable to cope with the mismatch in data [...]