11,146 research outputs found
Past, Present, and Future of Simultaneous Localization And Mapping: Towards the Robust-Perception Age
Simultaneous Localization and Mapping (SLAM)consists in the concurrent
construction of a model of the environment (the map), and the estimation of the
state of the robot moving within it. The SLAM community has made astonishing
progress over the last 30 years, enabling large-scale real-world applications,
and witnessing a steady transition of this technology to industry. We survey
the current state of SLAM. We start by presenting what is now the de-facto
standard formulation for SLAM. We then review related work, covering a broad
set of topics including robustness and scalability in long-term mapping, metric
and semantic representations for mapping, theoretical performance guarantees,
active SLAM and exploration, and other new frontiers. This paper simultaneously
serves as a position paper and tutorial to those who are users of SLAM. By
looking at the published research with a critical eye, we delineate open
challenges and new research issues, that still deserve careful scientific
investigation. The paper also contains the authors' take on two questions that
often animate discussions during robotics conferences: Do robots need SLAM? and
Is SLAM solved
Unsupervised state representation learning with robotic priors: a robustness benchmark
Our understanding of the world depends highly on our capacity to produce
intuitive and simplified representations which can be easily used to solve
problems. We reproduce this simplification process using a neural network to
build a low dimensional state representation of the world from images acquired
by a robot. As in Jonschkowski et al. 2015, we learn in an unsupervised way
using prior knowledge about the world as loss functions called robotic priors
and extend this approach to high dimension richer images to learn a 3D
representation of the hand position of a robot from RGB images. We propose a
quantitative evaluation of the learned representation using nearest neighbors
in the state space that allows to assess its quality and show both the
potential and limitations of robotic priors in realistic environments. We
augment image size, add distractors and domain randomization, all crucial
components to achieve transfer learning to real robots. Finally, we also
contribute a new prior to improve the robustness of the representation. The
applications of such low dimensional state representation range from easing
reinforcement learning (RL) and knowledge transfer across tasks, to
facilitating learning from raw data with more efficient and compact high level
representations. The results show that the robotic prior approach is able to
extract high level representation as the 3D position of an arm and organize it
into a compact and coherent space of states in a challenging dataset.Comment: ICRA 2018 submissio
Deep Visual Foresight for Planning Robot Motion
A key challenge in scaling up robot learning to many skills and environments
is removing the need for human supervision, so that robots can collect their
own data and improve their own performance without being limited by the cost of
requesting human feedback. Model-based reinforcement learning holds the promise
of enabling an agent to learn to predict the effects of its actions, which
could provide flexible predictive models for a wide range of tasks and
environments, without detailed human supervision. We develop a method for
combining deep action-conditioned video prediction models with model-predictive
control that uses entirely unlabeled training data. Our approach does not
require a calibrated camera, an instrumented training set-up, nor precise
sensing and actuation. Our results show that our method enables a real robot to
perform nonprehensile manipulation -- pushing objects -- and can handle novel
objects not seen during training.Comment: ICRA 2017. Supplementary video:
https://sites.google.com/site/robotforesight
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