Frederic Siepmann, a development specialist at BMW R&D will present in our School of Computer Science research seminar series on 12/02/16 at 2pm. His talk will take place in seminar room MB1020 (1st floor Minerva Building). Frederic will share his journey from being an academic working on autonomous robots to eventually become a developer in car autonomy and … Continue reading SoCS Research Seminar 12/2/16 2pm MB1020: From Autonomous Robots to Autonomous Cars →
We’ve got some great seminars coming up in the School of Computer Science, so put these dates in your diary and we’ll see you there. First up next week we have a seminar on ‘Visual mining – interpreting image and video‘ with speaker Professor Stefan Rüger from the Knowledge Media Institute, The Open University, UK. The … Continue reading Save the date: Upcoming must-see seminars →
A long-standing goal of AI is to enable robots to plan in the face of uncertain and incomplete information, and to handle task failure intelligently. This paper shows how to achieve this. There are two central ideas. The first idea is to organize the robot’s knowledge into three layers: instance knowledge at the bottom, commonsense knowledge above that, and diagnostic knowledge on top. Knowledge in a layer above can be used to modify knowledge in the layer(s) below. The second idea is that the robot should represent not just how its actions change the world, but also what it knows or believes. There are two types of knowledge effects the robot’s actions can have: epistemic effects (I believe X because I saw it) and assumptions (I’ll assume X to be true). By combining the knowledge layers with the models of knowledge effects, we can simultaneously solve several problems in robotics: (i) task planning and execution under uncertainty; (ii) task planning and execution in open worlds; (iii) explaining task failure; (iv) verifying those explanations. The paper describes how the ideas are implemented in a three-layer architecture on a mobile robot platform. The robot implementation was evaluated in five different experiments on object search, mapping, and room categorization.
Cite as:
Hanheide, Marc and Göbelbecker, Moritz and Horn, Graham S. and Pronobis, Andrzej and Sjöö, Kristoffer and Aydemir, Alper and Jensfelt, Patric and Gretton, Charles and Dearden, Richard and Janicek, Miroslav and Zender, Hendrik and Kruijff, Geert-Jan and Hawes, Nick and Wyatt, Jeremy L. (2015) Robot task planning and explanation in open and uncertain worlds. Artificial Intelligence. ISSN 0004-3702. DOI: 10.1016/j.artint.2015.08.008
Did you miss our ‘Showcasing Developments in Agri-food Technology’ event at our Holbeach campus? Don’t worry if you did! Watch them here Dr Simon Pearson tells us how LED’s are helping farming, see how the Microsoft hardware Kinect is moving computer science forward with Professor Tom Duckett, and industry expert Philip Garford shows you his RoboCrop technology. Click
The School of Computer Science is pleased to welcome Prof Nick Taylor (from Heriot-Watt University) for a research talk as part of the School’s research seminar series. Prof Tayler will be presenting current research from “The Edinburgh Centre for Robotics”. When? Fri 27/11/2015, 10am Where? David Chiddick Building, Room BL1105 (1st Floor) Abstract: The Edinburgh Centre for Robotics harnesses … Continue reading SoCS Research Seminar Series on 27/11/2015: Prof Nick Taylor (HWU) →