PhD Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Interactive Weak Supervision – Learning Useful Heuristics for Data Labeling

Zoom Link Abstract: Obtaining large annotated datasets is critical for training successful machine learning models and it is frequently a bottleneck in practice. Weak supervision offers a promising alternative for producing labeled datasets without ground truth annotations by generating probabilistic labels using multiple noisy heuristics. This process can scale to large amounts of data and [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Automated Action Selection and Embodied Simulation for Socially Assistive Robots using Standardized Interactions

Zoom Link Abstract: Robots have the tremendous potential of assisting people in their lives, allowing them to achieve goals that they would not be able to achieve by themselves. In particular, socially assistive robots provide assistance primarily through social interaction, in healthcare, therapy, and education contexts. Despite their potential, current socially assistive robots still lack [...]

VASC Seminar
Bryan Russell
Senior Research Scientist
Adobe Research

Telling Left from Right: Learning Spatial Correspondence Between Sight and Sound

Virtual VASC Seminar:  https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92741882813?pwd=R1R0eGRaeXFHTEF2VWNwY2VIZmU5Zz09 Abstract:  Self-supervised audio-visual learning aims to capture useful representations of video by leveraging correspondences between visual and audio inputs. Existing approaches have focused primarily on matching semantic information between the sensory streams. In my talk, I’ll describe a novel self-supervised task to leverage an orthogonal principle: matching spatial information in the [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Heuristics for routing and scheduling of Spatio-Temporal type problems in industrial environments

Zoom Link 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 proposal, I will present work on heuristics for [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Aditya Agarwal – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom Link:  https://cmu.zoom.us/j/3276236755   Title: Fast and High-Quality GPU-based Deliberative Perception for Object Pose Estimation Abstract:  Pose estimation of known objects is fundamental to tasks such as robotic grasping and manipulation. The need for reliable grasping imposes stringent accuracy requirements on pose estimation in cluttered, occluded scenes in dynamic environments. Existing methods either require large sets of [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning Active Task-Oriented Exploration Policies for Bridging the Sim-to-Real Gap

Zoom Link Abstract: Training robotic policies in simulation suffers from the sim-to-real gap, as simulated dynamics can be different from real-world dynamics. Past works tackled this problem through domain randomization and online system-identification. The former is sensitive to the manually-specified training distribution of dynamics parameters and can result in behaviors that are overly conservative. The [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Understanding, Exploiting and Improving Inter-view Relationships

 Zoom Link Abstract: Multi-view machine learning has received substantial attention in various applications over recent years. These applications typically involve learning on data obtained from multiple sources of information, such as, for example, in multi-sensor systems such as self-driving cars and patient bed-side monitoring. Learning models for such applications can often benefit from leveraging not [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Postdoctoral Fellow
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Interferometric light transmission probing with coded mutual intensity

Zoom Link Abstract: We introduce a new interferometric imaging methodology that we term interferometry with coded mutual intensity, which allows selectively imaging photon paths based on attributes such as their length and endpoints. At the core of our methodology is a new technical result that shows that manipulating the spatial coherence properties of the light [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Josh Jaekel – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom Link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/97161117200?pwd=QlpkS0hFOFVLRDlKVlFqby9JbWZTUT09 Title: Towards Robust Multi-Camera Visual Inertial Odometry Abstract: Visual inertial odometry (VIO) has become an increasingly popular method of obtaining a state estimate on board smaller robots like micro aerial vehicles (MAVs). While VIO has demonstrated impressive results in certain environments, there is still work to be done in improving the robustness of [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

John Mai – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom Link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/7518832261 Title: System Design, Modelling, and Control for an Off-Road Autonomous Ground Vehicle Abstract: Autonomy in passenger road vehicles has long been a goal for many research groups and companies, and there has been a significant amount of focus on achieving this endeavour. A lesser focused upon area is the task of precise autonomous [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Zoom Link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/5523238059   Title: Robust Instance Tracking via Uncertainty Flow   Abstract: Current state-of-the-art trackers often fail due to distractors and large object appearance changes. In this work, we explore the use of dense optical flow to improve tracking robustness. Our main insight is that, because flow estimation can also have errors, we need [...]

VASC Seminar
Ciprian Corneanu
Research Assistant
Tawny GmbH, University of Barcelona

The Topology of Learning

Zoom Virtual Meeting:  https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92178295543?pwd=L2dwZU5SbDY5NzZZNzZ4ZmFUclRqQT09   Abstract: Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) have revolutionized computer vision. We now have DNNs that achieve top results in many computer vision problems, including object recognition, facial expression analysis, and semantic segmentation, to name but a few. Unfortunately, the rise in performance has come with a cost.  DNNs have become so [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sarthak Ahuja – MSR Thesis Talk

NSH 4305

Zoom Link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/8978517404 Title: Visual Assessment for Non-Disruptive Object Extraction Abstract: Robots operating in human environments need to perform a variety of dexterous manipulation tasks on object arrangements that have complex physical support relationships, e.g. procuring utensils from a large pile of dishes, grabbing a bottle from a stuffed fridge, or fetching a book from a loaded [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Eric Dexheimer – MSR Thesis Talk

Location: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/98262481359?pwd=dnN4UERmQlF6dVVROTQ1czYrU215UT09 Title: Efficient Multiresolution Scrolling Grid for MAV Obstacle Avoidance Abstract: In this talk, we propose the use of an efficient, structured multiresolution representation for robot mapping and planning.  We focus on expanding the sensor range of dense local grids for memory-constrained platforms.  While multiresolution data structures have been proposed previously, we avoid processing [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Tanmay Agarwal – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/3388909661 Title: On-Policy Reinforcement Learning for Learning to Drive in Urban Settings Abstract: Traditional autonomous vehicle pipelines that follow a modular approach have been very successful in the past both in academia and industry, which has led to autonomy deployed on road. Though this approach provides ease of interpretation, its generalizability to unseen [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Jay Patrikar – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/93391276533?pwd=RTM4NTc0cTJETmRudGcwenNCSVgzdz09 Title: Wind-Field Estimation and Curvature Continuous Path Planning for Low Altitude Urban Aerial Mobility Abstract: Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) operating in dense urban areas need the ability to generate wind-aware collision-free, smooth, dynamically feasible trajectories between two locations. The complex and high-rise structure of the modern urban landscape affects the wind flow [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Benjamin Freed – MSR Thesis Talk

Where?:https://cmu.zoom.us/j/96355036481?pwd=OCtBeWZpMnZsZzFlRkJWc2dkZW5qUT09   Title: Discrete Communication Learning via Backpropagation for Distributed Computing on Bandwidth-Limited Communication Networks   Abstract: Efficient inter-agent communication is an important requirement for both cooperative multi-agent robotics tasks, as well as distributed computing.  In both of these domains, the rate at which information can be transferred between robots or computing nodes is often [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Tanvir Parhar – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom Link:https://cmu.zoom.us/j/3399055387 Title: Applications of Deep Learning for Robotic Agriculture.   Abstract: Agricultural automation is a varied and challenging field, with tasks ranging from detection to sizing and from manipulation to navigation. These are also precursors to effective plant breeding and management. Making plant measurements by manually scouting is labor-intensive and intractable at large scale. [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Hitesh Arora – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/4937138807   Title: Off-Policy Reinforcement Learning for Autonomous Driving   Abstract: Modern autonomous driving systems continue to face the challenges of handling complex and variable multi-agent real-world scenarios. Some subsystems, such as perception, use deep learning-based approaches to leverage large amounts of data to generalize to novel scenes. Other subsystems, such as planning [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Scott Sun – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/93097644031?pwd=RzZVSXEvdE5zZ0RDaU9FdmRUMU1vQT09 Title: Accurate Orientation Estimates for Deep Inertial Odometry Abstract: Many smartphone applications use inertial measurement units (IMUs) to sense movement, but the use of these sensors for pedestrian localization can be challenging due to their noise characteristics. Recent deep inertial odometry approaches to pedestrian navigation have demonstrated the increasing feasibility of inertial navigation. However, [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Allen Cheng – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/6056258382   Title: Search-Based Planning with Extend Operator   Abstract: Sampling-based approaches are often favored in robotics for high-dimensional motion planning for their fast coverage of the search space. However, at best they offer asymptotic guarantees on completeness and solution quality, and returned paths are typically unpredictable due to their inherent stochasticity. By [...]

VASC Seminar
Vincent Sitzmann
Postdoc
MIT CSAIL

Implicit Neural Scene Representations

Virtual Zoom Seminar:  https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92178295543?pwd=L2dwZU5SbDY5NzZZNzZ4ZmFUclRqQT09   Abstract How we represent signals has major implications for the algorithms we build to analyze them. Today, most signals are represented discretely: Images as grids of pixels, shapes as point clouds, audio as grids of amplitudes, etc. If images weren't pixel grids - would we be using convolutional neural networks [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Chenfeng Tu – MSR Thesis Talk

Location: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/96696044200?pwd=MVl4aUpiZlYvYlRwRmF1SVBUeGx6Zz09   Title: On-the-fly Targetless Extrinsics Calibration For Multi-Stereo Systems Without Field-of-View Overlap Abstract: In this talk, we propose an on-the-fly extrinsics calibration method for stereo pairs lacking overlapping field of view that is robust to visual odometry errors. Multi-stereo systems are becoming increasingly popular because of their large field of view (FoV) that benefits [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Shuoqi Chen – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/9608506704   Title: Towards Geometric Motion Planning for 3-link Kinematic Systems   Abstract: Geometric mechanics offers a powerful mathematical framework for studying locomotion for mobile systems. Despite the well-established literature, challenges remain when using geometric mechanics to design gaits for robots made of multi-link chain; in this thesis, we look at two of them. First, [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Robot Deep Reinforcement Learning: Tensor State-Action Spaces and Auxiliary Task Learning with Multiple State Representations

Zoom Link Abstract: A long standing goal of robotics research is to create algorithms that can automatically learn complex control strategies from scratch. Part of the challenge of applying such algorithms to robots is the choice of representation. Reinforcement Learning (RL) algorithms have been successfully applied to many different robotic tasks such as the Ball-in-a-Cup [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Raunaq Bhirangi – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/93803046130?pwd=dE5LU21lakcxNjBmZ0EvVDdNOWswdz09   Title: Learning Families of Behaviors for Legged Locomotion using Model-Free Deep Reinforcement Learning   Abstract: Conventional planning and control of highly articulated legged robots is challenging because of the high dimensionality of the state space, and such conventional techniques normally produce a single point solution. In this work, we present a [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

William Qi – MSR Thesis Talk

Location: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/96923127678?pwd=TWt3Zk5neFUzSlJWUjZEN2F6UVhudz09 Title: Representation Learning for Safe Autonomous Movement Abstract: Mobile robots have become an increasingly common presence in our homes and on our roads. To move safely within these shared spaces, autonomous agents must understand how other dynamic actors behave and how such behavior influences the navigability of the surrounding scene. Towards this goal, we [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Ryan Coulson – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/91138367616 Title: Soft Materials Architectures for Robot Manipulation Abstract: Robot manipulation has been a prolific subject of academic research for several decades - however, today's robotic manipulators have yet to demonstrate an ability to perform robust and versatile dexterous manipulation. This challenge can largely be attributed to a tradeoff between complexity and capability [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Anish Bhattacharya – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/4413360562 Title: Toward Increased Airspace Safety: Quadrotor Guidance for Targeting Aerial Objects Abstract: As the market for commercially available unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) booms, there is an increasing number of small, teleoperated or autonomous aircraft found in protected or sensitive airspace. Existing solutions for removal of these aircraft are either military-grade and too [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Aaron Miller – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/95386019509?pwd=cmNnTm9lWWlNbTh1SmQ0RU5PVTBmQT09 Title: Cooperative Perception for Pairs of Self-Driving Cars   Abstract: Fully autonomous vehicles are expected to share the road with less advanced vehicles for a significant period of time. Furthermore, an increasing number of vehicles on the road are equipped with a variety of low-fidelity sensors which provide some perception and localization [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sara Misra – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/3216213856   Title: Learning-based modular framework for environment-adaptive planning in exploration tasks   Abstract: Search-based path planning has spawned a number of different solutions using different paradigms and strategies, both generalized and specific to certain problems, representations, and environments. Split into heuristic and non-heuristic based approaches, where heuristic-based approaches, embedded within these approaches [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Blake Buchanan – MSR Thesis Talk

Location: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/99874277969?pwd=Q1MvczNhWTB4UmF3UXFOMEFtVG1uZz09 Title: Mechanics and Control of Coupled Interactions in Ambient Media Abstract: Many multi-agent systems in nature comprise agents that interact with, and respond to, the dynamics of their environment. For example, fish school based on the fundamental fluid phenomena of vortex shedding, birds shed leading-edge vortices in formation for flocking, and E. coli bacteria [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Online Inference of Joint Occupancy using Forward Sensor Models and Trajectory Posteriors for Deliberate Robot Navigation

Zoom Link Abstract: Robotic navigation algorithms for real-world robots require dense and accurate probabilistic volumetric representations of the environment in order to traverse efficiently. Sensor data in a Simultaneous Localisation And Mapping (SLAM) context, however, always has associated acquisition noise and pose uncertainty, and encoding this within the map representation while still maintaining computational tractability [...]

VASC Seminar
Ashok Veeraraghavan
Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Rice University, Houston TX

Computational Imaging: Beyond the Limits Imposed by Lenses

Virtual VASC Seminar:  https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92587238250?pwd=S0paYUVBUXozQkFTclMwRUg0MzBNZz09   Abstract: The lens has long been a central element of cameras, since its early use in the mid-nineteenth century by Niepce, Talbot, and Daguerre. The role of the lens, from the Daguerrotype to modern digital cameras, is to refract light to achieve a one-to-one mapping between a point in the scene and a point on the sensor. This effect enables the sensor to compute a particular two-dimensional (2D) [...]

Field Robotics Center Seminar
Ross Gilson
Senior Field Applications Engineer
Real-Time Innovations (RTI)

Beyond ROS: Using a Data Connectivity Framework to build and run Autonomous Systems

Virtual FRC Seminar: Seminar recording: https://cmu.zoom.us/rec/share/x84qF7_q8TlIcpHoyG_DRa58O6i8aaa8hCAW_fEPxEkBGjBVPyzW_lK0YW30RfJ3?startTime=1598551489000 Passcode: qu6)ePH9 Abstract: Next-generation robotics will need more than the current ROS code in order to comply with the interoperability, security and scalability requirements for commercial deployments. This session will provide a technical overview of ROS, ROS2 and the Data Distribution Service™ (DDS) protocol for data connectivity in safety-critical cyber-physical [...]

VASC Seminar
Andreas Geiger
Professor
University of Tübingen

Learning 3D Reconstruction in Function Space

Virtual VASC Seminar: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/96635002737?pwd=RkxGVlJaUTlhcDdGeVBPcnpTS015dz09   Abstract: In this talk, I will show several recent results of my group on learning neural implicit 3D representations, departing from the traditional paradigm of representing 3D shapes explicitly using voxels, point clouds or meshes. Implicit representations have a small memory footprint and allow for modeling arbitrary 3D toplogies at [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Machine Learning Parallelism Could Be Adaptive, Composable and Automated

Zoom Link Abstract: In recent years, researchers in SysML have created algorithms and systems that parallelize ML training over multiple devices or computational nodes. As ML models become more structurally complex, many systems have struggled to provide all-round performance on a variety of models. Particularly, ML scale-up is usually underestimated in terms of the amount [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Computational Contact Modes for Robotics

Zoom Link Abstract: A central theme in robotics is that of robots interacting with the world through physical contact. Whether it is a walking robot or robotic manipulator picking up an object, such as a spoon, we desire robots that physically interact with their environments. One significant challenge in physical robot interactions involves dealing with [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Data-Driven Robotic Grasping in the Wild

Zoom Link Abstract: Humans can effortlessly grasp a wide variety of objects in diverse environments. On the other hand, robotic grasping has been extremely challenging in practice and is far from matching human dexterity. Despite recent progress in the community, most research is still largely focused on constrained environments like picking individual objects on a [...]

RI Seminar
Scott Niekum
Assistant Professor & Director of the Personal Autonomous Robotics Lab (PeARL)
Department of Computer Science, University of Texas at Austin

Scaling Probabilistically Safe Learning to Robotics

Zoom

  Abstract: Before learning robots can be deployed in the real world, it is critical that probabilistic guarantees can be made about the safety and performance of such systems.  In recent years, safe reinforcement learning algorithms have enjoyed success in application areas with high-quality models and plentiful data, but robotics remains a challenging domain for [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Routing for Persistent Exploration in Dynamic Environments with Teams of Energy-Constrained Robots

Abstract: Disaster relief scenarios require rapid and persistent situational awareness to inform first-responders of safe and viable routes through a constantly shifting environment. Knowing what roads have become flooded or are suddenly obstructed by debris can significantly improve response time and ease the distribution of resources. In a sufficiently large environment, deploying and maintaining fixed [...]

VASC Seminar
Vicente Ordónez-Román
Assistant Professor
University of Virginia

Compositional Representations for Visual Recognition

Virtual VASC - https://cmu.zoom.us/j/99437689110?pwd=cWxuQkIwWlFFZEk0QkVDUVFiN0lTdz09   Abstract: Compositionality is the ability for a model to recognize a concept based on its parts or constituents. This ability is essential to use language effectively as there exists a very large combination of plausible objects, attributes, and actions in the world. We posit that visual recognition models should be [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sparse Spatial Hashing for Dense 3D Reconstruction

Abstract: Real-world 3D data is locally dense but globally sparse. Therefore, efficient sparse data structures are an essential component of dense 3D perception for computer vision and robotics. We manifest the power of spatial hashing by two typical tasks: dense scene reconstruction and global registration. In the first task, we accelerate volumetric integration and surface [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Coordinated online multi-robot planning

Abstract: Multi-robot applications frequently seek to employ human operators to direct robot actions online because fully automated planners struggle to encode human expertise or handle the extenuating circumstances that occur during real world operations. However, it is extremely challenging for a human to direct multi-robot teams, especially online, i.e., in real-time. From entertainment to defense, [...]

RI Seminar
Robert D. Gregg IV
Associate Professor & Associate Director of Robotics
Electrical Engineering & Computer Science , University of Michigan

From kinematic to energetic design and control of wearable robots for agile human locomotion

Abstract:  Even with the help of modern prosthetic and orthotic (P&O) devices, lower-limb amputees and stroke survivors often struggle to walk in the home and community. Emerging powered P&O devices could actively assist patients to enable greater mobility, but these devices are currently designed to produce a small set of pre-defined motions. Finite state machines [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Postdoctoral Fellow
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Sensor Planning for Large Numbers of Robots

Abstract: In the wake of a natural disaster, locating and extracting victims quickly is critical because mortality rises rapidly after the first forty-eight hours. In order to assist search and rescue teams and improve response times, teams of aerial robots equipped with sensors and cameras can engage in sensing tasks such as mapping buildings, assessing [...]

VASC Seminar

Making 3D Predictions with 2D Supervision

Abstract: Building computer vision systems that understand 3D shape are important for applications including autonomous vehicles, graphics, and VR / AR. If we assume 3D shape supervision, we can now build systems that do a reasonable job at predicting 3D shapes from images. However, 3D supervision is difficult to obtain at scale; therefore we should [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

3D Multi-Object Tracking for Autonomous Driving

Abstract: 3D multi-object tracking (MOT) is a key component of a perception system for autonomous driving. Due to recent progress in 3D object detection in the context of autonomous driving, recent work in 3D MOT primarily focuses on online tracking with the use of a tracking-by-detection pipeline. In this talk, we introduce a new 3D [...]

RI Seminar
Assistant Professor
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

The World’s Tiniest Space Program

Abstract:  The aerospace industry has experienced a dramatic shift over the last decade: Flying a spacecraft has gone from something only national governments and large defense contractors could afford to something a small startup can accomplish on a shoestring budget. A virtuous cycle has developed where lower costs have led to more launches and the [...]

VASC Seminar
Angjoo Kanazawa
Assistant Professor
University of California

Perceiving 3D Human-Object Spatial Arrangements from a Single Image In-the-wild

Abstract: We live in a 3D world that is dynamic—it is full of life, with inhabitants like people and animals who interact with their environment through moving their bodies. Capturing this complex world in 3D from images has a huge potential for many applications such as compelling mixed reality applications that can interact with people [...]

RI Seminar
Raquel Urtasun
Uber ATG Chief Scientist & Head of Uber ATG Toronto
Computer Science Department, University of Toronto

A future with affordable Self-driving vehicles

(Video to appear once approved) Abstract: We are on the verge of a new era in which robotics and artificial intelligence will play an important role in our daily lives. Self-driving vehicles have the potential to redefine transportation as we understand it today. Our roads will become safer and less congested, while parking spots will be repurposed as leisure [...]

VASC Seminar
Pawel Korus
Research Assistant Professor
NYU Center for Cybersecurity

Detection of Photo Manipulation with Media Forensics

Abstract: Rapid progress in machine learning, computer vision and graphics leads to successive democratization of media manipulation capabilities. While convincing photo and video manipulation used to require substantial time and skill, modern editors bring (semi-) automated tools that can be used by everyone. Some of the most recent examples include manipulation of human faces, e.g., [...]

RI Seminar
Kevin Lynch
Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Director, Center for Robotics & Biosystems, Northwestern University

Robotics and Biosystems

Abstract: Research at the Center for Robotics and Biosystems at Northwestern University encompasses bio-inspiration, neuromechanics, human-machine systems, and swarm robotics, among other topics.  In this talk I will give an overview of some of our recent work on in-hand manipulation, robot locomotion on yielding ground, and human-robot systems. Biography: Kevin Lynch received the B.S.E. degree [...]

VASC Seminar
Ce Liu
Staff Research Scientist
Google Research

Advancing the State of the Art of Computer Vision for Billions of Users

Abstract: At Google, advancing the state of the art of computer vision is very impactful as there are billions of users of Google products, many of which require high-quality, artifact-free images. I will share what we learned from successfully launching core computer vision techniques for various Google products, including PhotoScan (Photos), seamless Google Street View [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Ergodic Trajectory Optimization for Information Gathering

Abstract: Planetary robots currently rely on significant guidance from expert human operators. Science autonomy adds algorithms and methods for autonomous scientific exploration to improve efficiency of discovery and overcome limited communication bandwidth and delay bottlenecks. This research focuses on planning trajectories for information gathering and choosing sampling locations that have the most informative samples. We [...]

VASC Seminar
Salzmann Mathieu
Senior Researcher
EPFL & ClearSpace

Learning-based 6D Object Pose Estimation in Real-world Conditions

Abstract: Estimating the 6D pose, i.e., 3D rotation and 3D translation, of objects relative to the camera from a single input image has attracted great interest in the computer vision community. Recent works typically address this task by training a deep network to predict the 6D pose given an image as input. While effective on [...]

VASC Seminar
Nicholas Carlini
Research Scientist
Google

Deep Learning: (still) Not Robust

Abstract: One of the key limitations of deep learning is its inability to generalize to new domains. This talk studies recent attempts at increasing neural network robustness to both natural and adversarial distribution shifts. Robustness to adversarial examples, inputs crafted specifically to fool machine learning models, are arguably the most difficult type of domain shift. [...]

RI Seminar
Brittany A. Duncan
Assistant Professor
Computer Science & Engineering, University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Drones in Public: distancing and communication with all users

Abstract:  This talk will focus on the role of human-robot interaction with drones in public spaces and be focused on two individual research areas: proximal interactions in shared spaces and improved communication with both end-users and bystanders. Prior work on human-interaction with aerial robots has focused on communication from the users or about the intended direction [...]

VASC Seminar
Zoltán Ádám Milacski
PhD Candidate
ELTE Eötvös Loránd University

End-to-End ‘One Networks’: Learning Regularizers for Least Squares via Deep Neural Networks

Abstract: Linear Restoration Problems (or Linear Inverse Problems) involve reconstructing images or videos from noisy measurement vectors. Notable examples include denoising, inpainting, super-resolution, compressive sensing, deblurring and frame prediction. Often, multiple such tasks should be solved simultaneously, e.g., through Regularized Least Squares, where each individual problem is underdetermined (overcomplete) with infinitely many solutions from which [...]

RI Seminar
Chelsea Finn
Assistant Professor
Computer Science & Electrical Engineering, Stanford University

Data Scalability for Robot Learning

Abstract: Recent progress in robot learning has demonstrated how robots can acquire complex manipulation skills from perceptual inputs through trial and error, particularly with the use of deep neural networks. Despite these successes, the generalization and versatility of robots across environment conditions, tasks, and objects remains a major challenge. And, unfortunately, our existing algorithms and [...]

RI Seminar
Raj Reddy Assistant Professor in Robotics
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Learning to Generalize beyond Training

Abstract: Generalization, i.e., the ability to adapt to novel scenarios, is the hallmark of human intelligence. While we have systems that excel at cleaning floors, playing complex games, and occasionally beating humans, they are incredibly specific in that they only perform the tasks they are trained for and are miserable at generalization. One of the [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Planning and Execution using Inaccurate Models with Provable Guarantees on Task Completeness

Abstract: Modern planning methods are effective in computing feasible and optimal plans for robotic tasks when given access to accurate dynamical models. However, robots operating in the real world often face situations that cannot be modeled perfectly before execution. Thus, we only have access to simplified but potentially inaccurate models. This imperfect modeling can lead [...]

VASC Seminar
Sheng-Yu Wang
PhD Student
CMU

Detecting Image Synthesis — Shallow and Deep

Abstract: The proliferation of synthetic media are subject to malicious usages such as disinformation campaigns, posing potential threats to media integrity and democracy. A way to combat this is developing forensics algorithms to identify manipulated media. In the beginning of the talk, I will discuss how one can train a model to detect photos manipulated [...]

RI Event
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Shreyas Srivatchan – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom

Zoom link: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92767964421?pwd=N0NqRXZ5M04zQUhObklyZ3ZTL29jZz09 Meeting ID: 927 6796 4421 Password: password   Title: Development of a balancing robot as an indoor service agent   Abstract: This work presents a robotic system that can navigate human environments, respond to speech commands, and perform simple tasks. To achieve this, a ballbot-type robot that balances and navigates on a single spherical [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Constraint-Based Coverage Path Planning: A Novel Approach to Achieving Energy-Efficient Coverage

Abstract: Despite substantial technological progress that has driven the proliferation of robots across various industries and aspects of our lives, the lack of a decisive breakthrough in energy storage capabilities has restrained this trend, particularly with respect to mobile robots designed for use in unstructured and unknown field environments. The fact that these domains are [...]

VASC Seminar
Sarah Aboutalib
Former Postdoctoral Scholar
University of Pittsburgh

Deep Learning to Distinguish Recalled but Benign Mammography Images in Breast Cancer Screening

Abstract: Breast cancer screening using the standard mammography exam currently exhibits a high false recall rate (11.6% for women in the U.S.). Only a low proportion (0.5%) of women who were recalled for additional workup were actually found to have breast cancer. As a result of the unnecessary stress and follow-up work from these false [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Residual Force Control for Agile Human Behavior Imitation and Extended Motion Synthesis

Abstract: Reinforcement learning has shown great promise for synthesizing realistic human behaviors by learning humanoid control policies from motion capture data. However, it is still very challenging to reproduce sophisticated human skills like ballet dance, or to stably imitate long-term human behaviors with complex transitions. The main difficulty lies in the dynamics mismatch between the [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
Extern
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Studying the Evolution of Pedestrian Group Space

Abstract: Imagine walking along a busy sidewalk, do you track the movement of every single individual? Or do you simply group pedestrians with similar moving patterns and then track the movement of this group? Grouping is a common behavior in pedestrian navigation and it is typically inappropriate for a robot to cut through the social [...]

PhD Thesis Defense
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Unsupervised Learning of the 4D Audio-Visual World from Sparse Unconstrained Real-World Samples

Abstract: We, humans, can easily observe, explore, and analyze the world we live in. We, however, struggle to share our observation, exploration, and analysis with others. This thesis introduce Computational Studio, computational machinery that can understand, explore, and create the four-dimensional audio-visual world. This allows: (1) humans to communicate with other humans without any loss [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Xueting Li – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom

Title: Multi-agent Deception in Attack-Defense Stochastic Game   Abstract: In adversarial scenarios, defending oneself by using deception has recently been studied. A popular direction is to design deceptive defense strategies when the defender has complete information of the game and the attacker doesn't. The work on deception so far models the games as a signal game [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Physical Interaction and Manipulation of the Environment using Aerial Robots

Abstract: There has been an increasing demand for applications that include aerial robots' physical interactions with their environment, such as contact inspection, package pickup, and drilling. The demand has pushed the research groups towards new robot architectures and methods, but only limited research has been done to enable real-world applications. Fully-actuated multirotors were developed to [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Visual Recognition Towards Autonomy

Abstract: Perception for autonomy presents a collection of compelling challenges for visual recognition. We focus on three key challenges in this thesis. The first key challenge is learning representations for 2D data such as RGB images. 2D sensing brings unique challenges in scale variance and occlusion. Intuitively, the cues for recognizing a 3px tall object [...]

PhD Thesis Proposal
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Rich Models and Maps in Factor Graphs with Applications to Tactile Sensing

Abstract: Factor graphs offer a flexible and powerful framework for solving large-scale, nonlinear inference problems as encountered in robot perception. Typically these methods rely on simple models that are efficient to optimize. However, robots often perceive the world through complex, high-dimensional observations. They must in turn infer states that are used downstream by planning and [...]

MSR Speaking Qualifier
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Shubhankar Deshpande – MSR Thesis Talk

Zoom

Where: https://cmu.zoom.us/j/92520469322?pwd=SjlpTVI5MGdtN1VBakFkRG82bStYQT09 Meeting ID: 925 2046 9322 Passcode: 323696   Calendar Invite: https://tinyurl.com/shuby-msr-thesis-talk-invite Title: Towards Interpretable RL — Interactive Visualizations to Increase Insight Abstract: Visualization tools for supervised learning (SL) allow users to interpret, introspect, and gain an intuition for the successes and failures of their models. While reinforcement learning (RL) practitioners ask many of [...]