Representing and Reasoning About Spatial Regions Defined by Context
Klenk, Matthew (Palo Alto Research Center) | Hawes, Nick (University of Birmingham) | Lockwood, Kate (California State University, Monterey Bay)
In order to collaborate with people in the real world, cognitive systems must be able to represent and reason about spatial regions in human environments. Consider the command "go to the front of the classroom". The spatial region mentioned (the front of the classroom) is not perceivable using geometry alone. Instead it is defined by its functional use, implied by nearby objects and their configuration. In this paper, we define such areas as context-dependent spatial regions and propose a method for a cognitive system to learn them incrementally by combining qualitative spatial representations, semantic labels, and analogy. Using data from a mobile robot, we generate a relational representation of semantically labeled objects and their configuration. Next, we show how the boundary of a context-dependent spatial region can be defined using anchor points. Finally, we demonstrate how an existing computational model of analogy can be used to transfer this region to a new situation.
Nov-1-2011