RI Seminar
Kim Baraka
Assistant Professor
Department of Computer Science, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Why We Should Build Robot Apprentices And Why We Shouldn’t Do It Alone

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: For robots to be able to truly integrate human-populated, dynamic, and unpredictable environments, they will have to have strong adaptive capabilities. In this talk, I argue that these adaptive capabilities should leverage interaction with end users, who know how (they want) a robot to act in that environment. I will present an overview of [...]

MSR Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning Distributional Models for Relative Placement

GHC 6121

Abstract: Relative placement tasks are an important category of tasks in which one object needs to be placed in a desired pose relative to another object.  Previous work has shown success in learning relative placement tasks from just a small number of demonstrations, when using relational reasoning networks with geometric inductive biases. However, such methods fail [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Robust Body Exposure (RoBE): A Graph-based Dynamics Modeling Approach to Manipulating Blankets over People

NSH 1109

Abstract: Robotic caregivers could potentially improve the quality of life of many who require physical assistance. However, in order to assist individuals who are lying in bed, robots must be capable of dealing with a significant obstacle: the blanket or sheet that will almost always cover the person's body. We propose a method for targeted [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Exploration for Continually Improving Robots

GHC 8102

Abstract: General purpose robots should be able to perform arbitrary manipulation tasks, and get better at performing new ones as they obtain more experience. The current paradigm in robot learning involves imitation or simulation. Scaling these approaches to learn from more data for various tasks is bottle-necked by human labor required either in collecting demonstrations [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sparse-view 3D in the Wild

NSH 3305

Abstract: Reconstructing 3D scenes and objects from images alone has been a long-standing goal in computer vision. We have seen tremendous progress in recent years, capable of producing near photo-realistic renderings from any viewpoint. However, existing approaches generally rely on a large number of input images (typically 50-100) to compute camera poses and ensure view [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Deep 3D Geometric Reasoning for Robot Manipulation

GHC 4405

Abstract: To solve general manipulation tasks in real-world environments, robots must be able to perceive and condition their manipulation policies on the 3D world. These agents will need to understand various common-sense spatial/geometric concepts about manipulation tasks: that local geometry can suggest potential manipulation strategies, that policies should be invariant across choice of reference frame, [...]

Faculty Events

RI Faculty Business Meeting

Newell-Simon Hall 4305

Meeting for RI Faculty. Discussions include various department topics, policies, and procedures. Generally meets weekly.

RI Seminar
Jia Deng
Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science, Princeton University

Toward an ImageNet Moment for Synthetic Data

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract:  Data, especially large-scale labeled data, has been a critical driver of progress in computer vision. However, many important tasks remain starved of high-quality data. Synthetic data from computer graphics is a promising solution to this challenge, but still remains in limited use. This talk will present our work on Infinigen, a procedural synthetic data [...]

VASC Seminar
Luca Weihs
Research Manager
Allen Institute for AI

Imitating Shortest Paths in Simulation Enables Effective Navigation and Manipulation in the Real World

Newell-Simon Hall 3305

Abstract: We show that imitating shortest-path planners in simulation produces Stretch RE-1 robotic agents that, given language instructions, can proficiently navigate, explore, and manipulate objects in both simulation and in the real world using only RGB sensors (no depth maps or GPS coordinates). This surprising result is enabled by our end-to-end, transformer-based, SPOC architecture, powerful [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Towards diverse zero-shot manipulation via actualizing visual plans

GHC 4405

Abstract: In this thesis, we seek to learn a generalizable goal-conditioned policy that enables zero-shot robot manipulation — interacting with unseen objects in novel scenes without test-time adaptation. Robots that can be reliably deployed out-of-the-box in new scenarios have the potential for helping humans in everyday tasks. Not requiring any test-time training through demonstrations or [...]