activity planning
Activity Planning for a Lunar Orbital Mission
Bresina, John L. (NASA Ames Research Center)
This article describes a challenging, real-world planning problem within the context of a NASA mission called LADEE (Lunar Atmospheric and Dust Environment Explorer). One key aspect of this approach is the design of the activity planning process based on principles of problem decomposition and planning abstraction levels. The second key aspect is the mixed-initiative system developed for this task, called LASS (LADEE Activity Scheduling System). The primary challenge for LASS was representing and managing the science constraints that were tied to key points in the spacecraft's orbit, given their dynamic nature due to the continually updated orbit determination solution.
Activity Planning for a Lunar Orbital Mission
Bresina, John L. (NASA Ames Research Center)
This article describes a challenging, real-world planning problem within the context of a NASA mission called LADEE (Lunar Atmospheric and Dust Environment Explorer). I present the approach taken to reduce the complexity of the activity-planning task in order to perform it effectively under the time pressures imposed by the mission requirements. One key aspect of this approach is the design of the activity planning process based on principles of problem decomposition and planning abstraction levels. The second key aspect is the mixed-initiative system developed for this task, called LASS (LADEE Activity Scheduling System). The primary challenge for LASS was representing and managing the science constraints that were tied to key points in the spacecraftโs orbit, given their dynamic nature due to the continually updated orbit determination solution.
Activity Planning for a Lunar Orbital Mission
Bresina, John L. (NASA Ames Research Center)
This paper describes a challenging, real-world planning problem within the context of a NASA mission called LADEE (Lunar Atmospheric Dust Environment Explorer). We present the approach taken to reduce the complexity of the activity planning task in order to effectively perform it within the time pressures imposed by the mission requirements. One key aspect of this approach is the design of the activity planning process based on principles of problem decomposition and planning abstraction levels. The second key aspect is the mixed-initiative system developed for this task, called LASS (LADEE Activity Scheduling System). The primary challenge for LASS was representing and managing the science constraints that were tied to key points in the spacecraftโs orbit, given their dynamic nature due to the continually updated orbit determination solution.
Planning as an Iterative Process
Smith, David E. (NASA Ames Research Center)
Activity planning for missions such as the Mars Exploration Rover mission presents many technical challenges, including oversubscription, consideration of time, concurrency, resources, preferences, and uncertainty. These challenges have all been addressed by the research community to varying degrees, but significant technical hurdles still remain. In addition, the integration of these capabilities into a single planning engine remains largely unaddressed. However, I argue that there is a deeper set of issues that needs to be considered -- namely the integration of planning into an iterative process that begins before the goals, objectives, and preferences are fully defined. This introduces a number of technical challenges for planning, including the ability to more naturally specify and utilize constraints on the planning process, the ability to generate multiple qualitatively different plans, and the ability to provide deep explanation of plans.
Hierarchical Multimodal Planning for Pervasive Interaction
Lin, Yong (University of Texas at Arlington) | Makedon, Fillia ( University of Texas at Arlington )
Traditional dialogue management systems are tightly coupled with the sensing ability of a single computer. How to organize an interaction in pervasive environments to provide a friendly and integrated interface to users is an important issue. This requires a transition of the human-computer interaction (HCI) from tight coupling to loose coupling. This paper proposes a hierarchical multimodal framework for pervasive interactions. Our system is designed to remind the activities of daily living for individuals with cognitive impairments.The system is composed of Markov decision processes for activity planing, and multimodal partially observable Markov decision processes for action planning and executing. Empirical results demonstrate the hierarchical multimodal framework establishes a flexible mechanism for pervasive interaction systems.