Events from January 20, 2017 – December 17, 2025 – Robotics Institute Carnegie Mellon University
2025-12-17T00:00:00-05:00
  • Staff Events

    Robotics Institute Administrative Staff Winter Tree Lunch

    Newell-Simon Hall 4201

    Please join us for our annual Robotics Institute Administrative Staff Winter Tree Decorating Lunch. A light lunch will be provided but staff-created treats will always be welcomed.

    PhD Speaking Qualifier
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Persistent Multi-Robot Mapping in an Uncertain Environment

    GHC 8102

    Abstract: We present a system that addresses the challenge of concurrently mapping, scheduling, and deploying a team of energy-constrained robots to persistently cover an unknown and potentially dynamic environment. This system can passively maintain an accurate representation of occupied space, allowing robots reliable access for monitoring, study, or search and rescue. Current state-of-the-art algorithms only [...]

    PhD Thesis Defense
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Learning with Clusters

    GHC 8102

    Abstract: Clustering, the problem of grouping similar data, has been extensively studied since at least the 1950's. As machine learning becomes more prominent, clustering has evolved from primarily a data analysis tool into an integrated component of complex robotic and machine learning systems, including those involving dimensionality reduction, anomaly detection, network analysis, image segmentation and [...]

    PhD Thesis Proposal
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Spatiotemporal Understanding of People Using Scenes, Objects, and Poses

    NSH 1305

    Abstract: Humans are arguably one of the most important entities that AI systems would need to understand to be useful and ubiquitous. From autonomous cars observing pedestrians to assistive robots helping the elderly, a large part of this understanding is focused on recognizing human actions, and potentially, their intentions. Humans themselves are quite good at [...]

    Faculty Candidate
    Systems Scientist
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Faster, Safer, Smaller: The future of autonomy needs all three

    Gates-Hillman Center 8102

    Abstract In this talk I will start with state estimation as my PhD work. Very often, state estimation plays a crucial role in a robotic system serving as a building block for autonomy. Challenges are to carry out state estimation in 6-DOF, in real-time at high frequencies, with high precision, robust to aggressive motion and [...]

    PhD Thesis Defense
    Robotics Institute,
    Carnegie Mellon University

    Sensing, Measuring, and Modeling Social Signals in Nonverbal Communication

    GHC 4405

    Abstract: Humans convey their thoughts, emotions, and intentions through a concert of social displays: voice, facial expressions, hand gestures, and body posture, collectively referred to as social signals. Despite advances in machine perception, machines are unable to discern the subtle and momentary nuances that carry so much of the information and context of human communication. [...]