Interview with Haimin Hu: Game-theoretic integration of safety, interaction and learning for human-centered autonomy

Robohub 

In this interview series, we're meeting some of the AAAI/SIGAI Doctoral Consortium participants to find out more about their research. In this latest interview, Haimin Hu tells us about his research on the algorithmic foundations of human-centered autonomy and his plans for future projects, and gives some advice for PhD students looking to take the next step in their career. My PhD research, conducted under the supervision of Professor Jaime Fernández Fisac in the Princeton Safe Robotics Lab, focuses on the algorithmic foundations of human-centered autonomy. By integrating dynamic game theory with machine learning and safety-critical control, my work aims to ensure autonomous systems, from self-driving vehicles to drones and quadrupedal robots, are performant, verifiable, and trustworthy when deployed in human-populated space. The core principle of my PhD research is to plan robots' motion in the joint space of both physical and information states, actively ensuring safety as they navigate uncertain, changing environments and interact with humans.

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