Context-Aware Risk Estimation in Home Environments: A Probabilistic Framework for Service Robots

Ishii, Sena, Chikhalikar, Akash, Ravankar, Ankit A., Luces, Jose Victorio Salazar, Hirata, Yasuhisa

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

-- We present a novel framework for estimating accident-prone regions in everyday indoor scenes, aimed at improving real-time risk awareness in service robots operating in human-centric environments. As robots become integrated into daily life, particularly in homes, the ability to anticipate and respond to environmental hazards is crucial for ensuring user safety, trust, and effective human-robot interaction. Each object is represented as a node with an associated risk score, and risk propagates asymmetrically from high-risk to low-risk objects based on spatial proximity and accident relationship. This enables the robot to infer potential hazards even when they are not explicitly visible or labeled. Designed for interpretability and lightweight onboard deployment, our method is validated on a dataset with human-annotated risk regions, achieving a binary risk detection accuracy of 75%. The system demonstrates strong alignment with human perception, particularly in scenes involving sharp or unstable objects. These results underline the potential of context-aware risk reasoning to enhance robotic scene understanding and proactive safety behaviors in shared human-robot spaces. This framework could serve as a foundation for future systems that make context-driven safety decisions, provide real-time alerts, or autonomously assist users in avoiding or mitigating hazards within home environments. As service robots become increasingly integrated into daily life--supporting tasks such as cleaning, acting as communication companions, searching for objects or navigating shared spaces [1]-[3]--their roles are expected to expand beyond single-function behaviors. With recent advances in embodied intelligence and large language models, these robots are beginning to understand complex instructions and act autonomously in diverse home environments.

Duplicate Docs Excel Report

Title
None found

Similar Docs  Excel Report  more

TitleSimilaritySource
None found