PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Massively Parallelized Lazy Planning Algorithms

GHC 4405

Abstract: Search-based planning algorithms enable autonomous agents like robots to come up with well-reasoned long horizon plans to achieve a given task objective. They do so by optimizing a task-specific cost function while respecting the constraints on either the agent (e.g. motion constraints) or the environment (e.g. obstacles). In robotics, such as in motion planning [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Run-Time Optimization in the Deep Learning Age

Abstract: In a recovery task one seeks to obtain an estimate of an unknown signal from a set of incomplete measurements. These problems arise in a number of computer vision applications, from image based tasks such as super-resolution and in-painting to 3D reconstruction tasks such as Non-Rigid Structure from Motion and scene flow estimation. Early [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

System Identification and Control of Multiagent Systems Through Interactions

GHC 6501

Abstract: This thesis investigates the problem of identifying dynamics models of individual agents of a multiagent system (MAS) and exploiting these models to shape their behavior using robots extrinsic to the MAS. While task-based control of a MAS using onboard controllers of its agents is well studied, we investigate (a) how easy it is for [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Driving Reconfigurable Unmanned Vehicle Design for Mobility Performance

Abstract: Unmanned ground vehicles are being deployed in increasingly diverse and complex environments. Advances in the field of robotics, including perception technology, computing power, and machine learning, have brought robots from the lab to the real world. Remote and autonomous vehicles are now used to explore volcanoes, caves, pipes, war zones, disaster sites, and even [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Towards Large-scale and Long-term Neural Map Representations

Abstract: We address the problem of large-scale and long-term neural map representations. Maps, as our prior understanding toward the environment, provide valuable information for modern robotics applications such as autonomous driving and AR/VR. The size of maps largely affects the end task performance: usually a more detailed map can support better performance, but would cost [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Manipulating Objects with Challenging Visual and Geometric Properties

GHC 6501

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 [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Large Scale Dense 3D Reconstruction via Sparse Representations

Abstract: Scene reconstruction systems take in (3D) videos as input, and output 3D models with associated poses for inputs. With the demand of 3D content generation, the technique has been drastically evolving in recent years. For professionals equipped with depth sensors, efficient dense reconstruction systems have become available to efficiently recover scene geometry. For ordinary [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Extern
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Teaching Agent Reward Functions via Demonstrations for Human Inverse Reinforcement Learning

NSH 4305

Abstract: For intelligent agents (e.g. robots) to be seamlessly integrated into human society, humans must be able to understand their decision making. For example, the decision making of autonomous cars must be clear to the engineers certifying their safety, passengers riding them, and nearby drivers negotiating the road simultaneously. As an agent's decision making can [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Policy Decomposition: Approximate Optimal Control with Suboptimality Estimates

NSH 3305

Abstract: Optimal Control is a formulation for designing controllers for dynamical systems by posing it as an optimization problem, whereby the desired long-term behavior of the system is expressed using a cost function. The objective is to compute a policy, i.e. a mapping from the state of the system to its control inputs, that minimizes [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Audience-Aware Legibility for Social Navigation

Abstract: Robots often need to communicate their goals to humans when navigating in a shared space to assist observers in anticipating the robot’s future actions. These human observers are often scattered throughout the environment, and each observer only has a partial view of the robot and its movements. A path that non-verbally communicates with multiple [...]