PhD Thesis Proposal
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Planning with Dynamics by Interleaving Search and Trajectory Optimization

NSH 4305

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 searching over the graph that results from discretizing the state and action space. However, in robotics, several dynamically rich tasks require high-dimensional planning in the continuous space. For such [...]

VASC Seminar
Fabio Pizzati
PhD student
Inria

Physics-informed image translation

Abstract:  Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs) have shown remarkable performances in image translation, being able to map source input images to target domains (e.g. from male to female, day to night, etc.). However, their performances may be limited by insufficient supervision, which may be challenging to obtain. In this talk, I will present our recent works [...]

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

Robots Should Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle

1305 Newell Simon Hall

Abstract: Despite numerous successes in deep robotic learning over the past decade, the generalization and versatility of robots across environments and tasks has remained a major challenge. This is because much of reinforcement and imitation learning research trains agents from scratch in a single or a few environments, training special-purpose policies from special-purpose datasets. In [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Solving Constraint Tasks with Memory-Based Learning

NSH 4305

Abstract: In constraint tasks, the current task state heavily limits what actions are available to an agent. Mechanical constraints exist in many common tasks such as construction, disassembly, and rearrangement and task space constraints exist in an even broader range of tasks. Deep reinforcement learning algorithms have typically struggled with constraint tasks for two main [...]

VASC Seminar
Adriana Kovashka
Associate Professor in Computer Science
University of Pittsburgh

Weak Multi-modal Supervision for Object Detection and Persuasive Media

Newell-Simon Hall 3305

Abstract:  The diversity of visual content available on the web presents new challenges and opportunities for computer vision models. In this talk, I present our work on learning object detection models from potentially noisy multi-modal data, retrieving complementary content across modalities, transferring reasoning models across dataset boundaries, and recognizing objects in non-photorealistic media.  While the [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Head-Worn Assistive Teleoperation of Mobile Manipulators

NSH 4305

Abstract: Mobile manipulators in the home can provide increased autonomy to individuals with severe motor impairments, who often cannot complete activities of daily living (ADLs) without the help of a caregiver. Teleoperation of an assistive mobile manipulator could enable an individual with motor impairments to independently perform self-care and household tasks, yet limited motor function [...]

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Text Classification with Class Descriptions Only

NSH 1109

Abstract: In this work, we introduce KeyClass, a weakly-supervised text classification framework that learns from class-label descriptions only, without the need to use any human-labeled documents. It leverages the linguistic domain knowledge stored within pre-trained language models and data programming to automatically label documents. We demonstrate its efficacy and flexibility by comparing it to state-of-the-art [...]

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.

PhD Speaking Qualifier
PhD Student
Robotics Institute,
Carnegie Mellon University

Multi-Object Tracking in the Crowd

NSH 4305

Abstract: In this talk, I will focus on the problem of multi-object tracking in crowded scenes. Tracking within crowds is particularly challenging due to heavy occlusion and frequent crossover between tracking targets. The problem becomes more difficult when we only have noisy bounding boxes due to background and neighboring objects. Existing tracking methods try to [...]