Toward Mobile Robots Reasoning Like Humans
Oh, Jean H (Carnegie Mellon University) | Suppé, Arne (Carnegie Mellon University) | Duvallet, Felix (Carnegie Mellon University) | Boularias, Abdeslam (Carnegie Mellon University) | Navarro-Serment, Luis (Carnegie Mellon University) | Hebert, Martial (Carnegie Mellon University) | Stentz, Anthony (Carnegie Mellon University) | Vinokurov, Jerry (Carnegie Mellon University) | Romero, Oscar (Carnegie Mellon University) | Lebiere, Christian (Carnegie Mellon University) | Dean, Robert (General Dynamics Robotic Systems)
Robots are increasingly becoming key players in human-robot teams. To become effective teammates, robots must possess profound understanding of an environment, be able to reason about the desired commands and goals within a specific context, and be able to communicate with human teammates in a clear and natural way. To address these challenges, we have developed an intelligence architecture that combines cognitive components to carry out high-level cognitive tasks, semantic perception to label regions in the world, and a natural language component to reason about the command and its relationship to the objects in the world. This paper describes recent developments using this architecture on a fielded mobile robot platform operating in unknown urban environments. We report a summary of extensive outdoor experiments; the results suggest that a multidisciplinary approach to robotics has the potential to create competent human-robot teams.
Mar-6-2015
- Country:
- North America > United States
- Maryland (0.28)
- Pennsylvania > Allegheny County
- Pittsburgh (0.14)
- North America > United States
- Genre:
- Research Report > New Finding (0.34)
- Industry:
- Technology: