9 research outputs found
A learning approach to the FOM problem
Hogan recently provided an heuristic technique called family of modes (FOM) to solve model predictive control (MPC) problems under hybrid constraints and underactuation. The goal of this study is to further develop this new method and to expand its usage in the robotics manipulation community. With that objective in mind, we address some of the method's weaknesses, we provide comparison tools to try to compare the method with traditional MPC solving techniques and we provide a simple and systematic technique to set-up the method's parameters. We conclude the study by presenting our the future lines of research, which consist in generalizing the method for more complex systems and testing it's robustness.Outgoin
Extension of the SWIFT option pricing scheme for european options calibration under Heston stochastic volatility model
A Heston model calibration technique is presented for European options under the Heston model. The novel Shannon Wavelets Inverse Fourier Technique (SWIFT) is extended for European option price calibration (previously it was used only for pricing European, Asian, barrier, and Bermudan options). This method has different expressions and speed-up techniques, adequate to different set-ups. These are discussed and new expressions and properties are presented for the gradient computation and option calibration. The Heston characteristic function expression recently proposed by \cite{cui17} is used in the SWIFT implementation due to its analytic gradient and its continuity properties. The time performance, robustness, and convergence under set-ups representative of real markets is studied for different implementations of the SWIFT technique and compared with the option calibration scheme presented by \cite{cui17} The SWIFT implementations are coded in C++ and uploaded to a public GitHub repository. The libray implements several of the different SWIFT expressions for GBM and Heston European options
Reactive Planar Manipulation with Convex Hybrid MPC
This paper presents a reactive controller for planar manipulation tasks that
leverages machine learning to achieve real-time performance. The approach is
based on a Model Predictive Control (MPC) formulation, where the goal is to
find an optimal sequence of robot motions to achieve a desired object motion.
Due to the multiple contact modes associated with frictional interactions, the
resulting optimization program suffers from combinatorial complexity when
tasked with determining the optimal sequence of modes.
To overcome this difficulty, we formulate the search for the optimal mode
sequences offline, separately from the search for optimal control inputs
online. Using tools from machine learning, this leads to a convex hybrid MPC
program that can be solved in real-time. We validate our algorithm on a planar
manipulation experimental setup where results show that the convex hybrid MPC
formulation with learned modes achieves good closed-loop performance on a
trajectory tracking problem
SWIFT Calibration of the Heston model
In the present work, the SWIFT method for pricing European options is extended to Heston model calibration. The computation of the option price gradient is simplified thanks to the knowledge of the characteristic function in closed form. The proposed calibration machinery appears to be extremely fast, in particular for a single expiry and multiple strikes, outperforming the state-of-the-art method we compare it with. Further, the a priori knowledge of SWIFT parameters makes a reliable and practical implementation of the presented calibration method possible. A wide range of stress, speed and convergence numerical experiments is carried out, with deep in-the-money, at-the-money and deep out-of-the-money options for very short and very long maturitie
Robotic Pick-and-Place of Novel Objects in Clutter with Multi-Affordance Grasping and Cross-Domain Image Matching
This paper presents a robotic pick-and-place system that is capable of
grasping and recognizing both known and novel objects in cluttered
environments. The key new feature of the system is that it handles a wide range
of object categories without needing any task-specific training data for novel
objects. To achieve this, it first uses a category-agnostic affordance
prediction algorithm to select and execute among four different grasping
primitive behaviors. It then recognizes picked objects with a cross-domain
image classification framework that matches observed images to product images.
Since product images are readily available for a wide range of objects (e.g.,
from the web), the system works out-of-the-box for novel objects without
requiring any additional training data. Exhaustive experimental results
demonstrate that our multi-affordance grasping achieves high success rates for
a wide variety of objects in clutter, and our recognition algorithm achieves
high accuracy for both known and novel grasped objects. The approach was part
of the MIT-Princeton Team system that took 1st place in the stowing task at the
2017 Amazon Robotics Challenge. All code, datasets, and pre-trained models are
available online at http://arc.cs.princeton.eduComment: Project webpage: http://arc.cs.princeton.edu Summary video:
https://youtu.be/6fG7zwGfIk
A learning approach to the FOM problem
Hogan recently provided an heuristic technique called family of modes (FOM) to solve model predictive control (MPC) problems under hybrid constraints and underactuation. The goal of this study is to further develop this new method and to expand its usage in the robotics manipulation community. With that objective in mind, we address some of the method's weaknesses, we provide comparison tools to try to compare the method with traditional MPC solving techniques and we provide a simple and systematic technique to set-up the method's parameters. We conclude the study by presenting our the future lines of research, which consist in generalizing the method for more complex systems and testing it's robustness.Outgoin
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Robotic Pick-and-Place of Novel Objects in Clutter with Multi-Affordance Grasping and Cross-Domain Image Matching
This paper presents a robotic pick-and-place system that is capable of grasping and recognizing both known and novel objects in cluttered environments. The key new feature of the system is that it handles a wide range of object categories without needing any task-specific training data for novel objects. To achieve this, it first uses a category-agnostic affordance prediction algorithm to select and execute among four different grasping primitive behaviors. It then recognizes picked objects with a cross-domain image classification framework that matches observed images to product images. Since product images are readily available for a wide range of objects (e.g., from the web), the system works out-of-the-box for novel objects without requiring any additional training data. Exhaustive experimental results demonstrate that our multi-affordance grasping achieves high success rates for a wide variety of objects in clutter, and our recognition algorithm achieves high accuracy for both known and novel grasped objects. The approach was part of the MIT-Princeton Team system that took 1st place in the stowing task at the 2017 Amazon Robotics Challenge. All code, datasets, and pre-trained models are available online at http://arc.cs.princeton.edu