910 research outputs found
Perseus: Randomized Point-based Value Iteration for POMDPs
Partially observable Markov decision processes (POMDPs) form an attractive
and principled framework for agent planning under uncertainty. Point-based
approximate techniques for POMDPs compute a policy based on a finite set of
points collected in advance from the agents belief space. We present a
randomized point-based value iteration algorithm called Perseus. The algorithm
performs approximate value backup stages, ensuring that in each backup stage
the value of each point in the belief set is improved; the key observation is
that a single backup may improve the value of many belief points. Contrary to
other point-based methods, Perseus backs up only a (randomly selected) subset
of points in the belief set, sufficient for improving the value of each belief
point in the set. We show how the same idea can be extended to dealing with
continuous action spaces. Experimental results show the potential of Perseus in
large scale POMDP problems
Sensor Scheduling for Energy-Efficient Target Tracking in Sensor Networks
In this paper we study the problem of tracking an object moving randomly
through a network of wireless sensors. Our objective is to devise strategies
for scheduling the sensors to optimize the tradeoff between tracking
performance and energy consumption. We cast the scheduling problem as a
Partially Observable Markov Decision Process (POMDP), where the control actions
correspond to the set of sensors to activate at each time step. Using a
bottom-up approach, we consider different sensing, motion and cost models with
increasing levels of difficulty. At the first level, the sensing regions of the
different sensors do not overlap and the target is only observed within the
sensing range of an active sensor. Then, we consider sensors with overlapping
sensing range such that the tracking error, and hence the actions of the
different sensors, are tightly coupled. Finally, we consider scenarios wherein
the target locations and sensors' observations assume values on continuous
spaces. Exact solutions are generally intractable even for the simplest models
due to the dimensionality of the information and action spaces. Hence, we
devise approximate solution techniques, and in some cases derive lower bounds
on the optimal tradeoff curves. The generated scheduling policies, albeit
suboptimal, often provide close-to-optimal energy-tracking tradeoffs
Decentralized Control of Partially Observable Markov Decision Processes using Belief Space Macro-actions
The focus of this paper is on solving multi-robot planning problems in
continuous spaces with partial observability. Decentralized partially
observable Markov decision processes (Dec-POMDPs) are general models for
multi-robot coordination problems, but representing and solving Dec-POMDPs is
often intractable for large problems. To allow for a high-level representation
that is natural for multi-robot problems and scalable to large discrete and
continuous problems, this paper extends the Dec-POMDP model to the
decentralized partially observable semi-Markov decision process (Dec-POSMDP).
The Dec-POSMDP formulation allows asynchronous decision-making by the robots,
which is crucial in multi-robot domains. We also present an algorithm for
solving this Dec-POSMDP which is much more scalable than previous methods since
it can incorporate closed-loop belief space macro-actions in planning. These
macro-actions are automatically constructed to produce robust solutions. The
proposed method's performance is evaluated on a complex multi-robot package
delivery problem under uncertainty, showing that our approach can naturally
represent multi-robot problems and provide high-quality solutions for
large-scale problems
Closed-loop Bayesian Semantic Data Fusion for Collaborative Human-Autonomy Target Search
In search applications, autonomous unmanned vehicles must be able to
efficiently reacquire and localize mobile targets that can remain out of view
for long periods of time in large spaces. As such, all available information
sources must be actively leveraged -- including imprecise but readily available
semantic observations provided by humans. To achieve this, this work develops
and validates a novel collaborative human-machine sensing solution for dynamic
target search. Our approach uses continuous partially observable Markov
decision process (CPOMDP) planning to generate vehicle trajectories that
optimally exploit imperfect detection data from onboard sensors, as well as
semantic natural language observations that can be specifically requested from
human sensors. The key innovation is a scalable hierarchical Gaussian mixture
model formulation for efficiently solving CPOMDPs with semantic observations in
continuous dynamic state spaces. The approach is demonstrated and validated
with a real human-robot team engaged in dynamic indoor target search and
capture scenarios on a custom testbed.Comment: Final version accepted and submitted to 2018 FUSION Conference
(Cambridge, UK, July 2018
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