65 research outputs found
Social Attention: Modeling Attention in Human Crowds
Robots that navigate through human crowds need to be able to plan safe,
efficient, and human predictable trajectories. This is a particularly
challenging problem as it requires the robot to predict future human
trajectories within a crowd where everyone implicitly cooperates with each
other to avoid collisions. Previous approaches to human trajectory prediction
have modeled the interactions between humans as a function of proximity.
However, that is not necessarily true as some people in our immediate vicinity
moving in the same direction might not be as important as other people that are
further away, but that might collide with us in the future. In this work, we
propose Social Attention, a novel trajectory prediction model that captures the
relative importance of each person when navigating in the crowd, irrespective
of their proximity. We demonstrate the performance of our method against a
state-of-the-art approach on two publicly available crowd datasets and analyze
the trained attention model to gain a better understanding of which surrounding
agents humans attend to, when navigating in a crowd
Diet-dependent immunohistochemical evaluation of connexin 43 in the sheep rumen
The objective of this study was to characterize the immunohistochemical localization of plasma membrane connexin 43 in the rumen of sheep after changing the diet from hay (ad libitum) to a mixed hay/concentrate diet. A total of 24 sheep were fed mixed hay/concentrate for different periods ranging from 0 weeks (control; hay ad libitum) to 12 weeks (1-1.5 kg hay plus 780 g concentrate per day in two equal portions). Using immunohistochemical technique the present study confirmed the existence of plasma membrane connexin 43 in the sheep rumen epithelium. Plasma membrane connexin 43 immunostaining was most intense at the stratum basale and stratum spinosum (suprabasal layer) and decreased iron intensity through stratum spinosum (superficial layers) to stratum granulosum. Meanwhile, stratum corneum was negative. The reaction around the cells gave a syncitial appearance with more apical-immunostaining concentration. Moreover, the present study confirmed a significant effect of concentrate diet on the immunoreactivity of plasma membrane connexin 43 in the rumen of sheep. A very strong degree of antibody reaction was seen in 4 to 12 weeks concentrate-fed groups
Modeling Cooperative Navigation in Dense Human Crowds
For robots to be a part of our daily life, they need to be able to navigate
among crowds not only safely but also in a socially compliant fashion. This is
a challenging problem because humans tend to navigate by implicitly cooperating
with one another to avoid collisions, while heading toward their respective
destinations. Previous approaches have used hand-crafted functions based on
proximity to model human-human and human-robot interactions. However, these
approaches can only model simple interactions and fail to generalize for
complex crowded settings. In this paper, we develop an approach that models the
joint distribution over future trajectories of all interacting agents in the
crowd, through a local interaction model that we train using real human
trajectory data. The interaction model infers the velocity of each agent based
on the spatial orientation of other agents in his vicinity. During prediction,
our approach infers the goal of the agent from its past trajectory and uses the
learned model to predict its future trajectory. We demonstrate the performance
of our method against a state-of-the-art approach on a public dataset and show
that our model outperforms when predicting future trajectories for longer
horizons.Comment: Accepted at ICRA 201
Model Learning for Look-ahead Exploration in Continuous Control
We propose an exploration method that incorporates look-ahead search over
basic learnt skills and their dynamics, and use it for reinforcement learning
(RL) of manipulation policies . Our skills are multi-goal policies learned in
isolation in simpler environments using existing multigoal RL formulations,
analogous to options or macroactions. Coarse skill dynamics, i.e., the state
transition caused by a (complete) skill execution, are learnt and are unrolled
forward during lookahead search. Policy search benefits from temporal
abstraction during exploration, though itself operates over low-level primitive
actions, and thus the resulting policies does not suffer from suboptimality and
inflexibility caused by coarse skill chaining. We show that the proposed
exploration strategy results in effective learning of complex manipulation
policies faster than current state-of-the-art RL methods, and converges to
better policies than methods that use options or parametrized skills as
building blocks of the policy itself, as opposed to guiding exploration. We
show that the proposed exploration strategy results in effective learning of
complex manipulation policies faster than current state-of-the-art RL methods,
and converges to better policies than methods that use options or parameterized
skills as building blocks of the policy itself, as opposed to guiding
exploration.Comment: This is a pre-print of our paper which is accepted in AAAI 201
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