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Events for December 2022 › Student Talks › PhD Thesis Proposal › – Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon UniversitySkip to content
Abstract: We study the problem of multi-human 3D reconstruction from RGB videos captured in the wild. Humans have dynamic motion, and reconstructing them in arbitrary settings is key to building immersive social telepresence, assistive humanoid robots, and augmented reality systems. However, creating such a system requires addressing fundamental issues with previous works regarding the data […]
Abstract: Humans possess a remarkable ability to learn to perform tasks from a variety of different sources-from language, instructions, demonstration, etc. In each case, they are able to easily extract the high-level strategy to solve the task, such as the recipe of cooking a dish, whilst ignoring irrelevant details, such as the precise shape of […]
Abstract: Intelligent robotic agents need to reason about the dynamics of their surrounding world, and use such dynamics reasoning to make future predictions for efficient task planning. In addition, it is also desirable for robots to associate past experience in their memories to their current observation, and conduct analogical reasoning to complete tasks at their [...]
Abstract: On-road autonomous driving has seen rapid progress in recent years with driverless vehicles being tested in various cities worldwide. However, this progress is limited to cities with well-established infrastructure and has yet to transfer to off-road regimes with unstructured environments and few paved roads. Advances in high-speed and reliable autonomous off-road driving can unlock [...]
Abstract: Real world robots need to continuously learn new manipulation tasks in a lifelong learning manner. These new tasks often share sub-structures (in the form of sub-tasks, controllers) with previously learned tasks. To utilize these shared sub-structures, we explore a compositional and object-centric approach to learn manipulation tasks. While compositionality in robot manipulation can manifest [...]