Objekte so geschickt wie Menschen zu handhaben, bleibt ein offenes Problem in der Robotik - nicht so sehr in sorgfältig kontrollierten Umgebungen wie in Fabriken, sondern in alltäglichen Haushaltsumgebungen, so genannten unstrukturierten Umgebungen.
Bei Interactive Perception geht es, wie der Name schon sagt, darum, die Wahrnehmung zu verbessern. Die Grundannahme ist, dass die Bereiche Wahrnehmung und Handlung nicht getrennt werden können, sondern einen Komplex bilden, der in seiner Gesamtheit untersucht werden muss. Mit diesem Ansatz versuchen wir, Roboter zu entwickeln, die ihre Umgebung aktiv erkunden, so wie ein Baby ein neues Spielzeug erkundet.
We developed an RGB-D-based online algorithm for the interactive perception of articulated objects. In contrast to existing solutions to this problem, the online-nature of the algorithm permits perception during the interactions and addresses a number of shortcomings of existing methods. Our algorithm consists of three interconnected recursive estimation loops. The interplay of these loops is the key to the robustness of our proposed approach. The robustness stems from the feedback from our algorithm which can be used to adapt the robot's behavior.
Robotic behavior can not only reveal properties of the environment, like kinematic degrees of freedom, but it can also be adapted to better understand the interaction between robot and environment itself. Robots need to assess the outcomes of their own actions and the sensory data created from task-directed behavior may not be sufficient for such an estimation. We work on adapting robotic behavior such that it is easier to estimate the outcomes of actions. This is a problem of learning interactive perception.
Manuel Baum
Aravind Battaje
Robots should not only passively process sensor information and then act based on the knowledge they extract from that sensor stream. They should (inter)actively shape that sensor stream by adapting their behavior so that the sensor stream becomes maximally informative for solving their tasks. We research how to generate such behavior in an engineering way, but also by learning it. In this research, we are interested in the relation between task-solving behavior, task-directed exploration and information based exploration. It's important for a robot to focus its exploration efforts on task-relevant variables, as pure information based exploration would generally not focus the robot's limited resources (due to its embodiment) enough for its behavior to be efficient.
If a robot faces a novel, unseen object, it must first acquire information about the object’s kinematic structure by interacting with it. But there is an infinite number of possible ways to interact with an object. The robot therefore needs kinematic background knowledge: knowledge about the regularities that hint at the kinematic structure.
We developed a method for the efficient extraction of kinematic background knowledge from interactions with the world. We use relational model-based reinforcement learning, an approach that combines concepts from first-order logic (a relational representation) and reinforcement learning. Relational representations allow the robot to conceptualize the world as object parts and their relationship, and reinforcement learning enables it to learn from the experience it collects by interacting with the world. Using this approach, the robot is able to collect experiences and extract kinematic background knowledge that generalizes to previously unseen objects.
Alexander von Humboldt professorship - awarded by the Alexander von Humboldt foundation and funded through the Ministry of Education and Research, BMBF, July 2009 - June 2014
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2002/1 "Science of Intelligence" - project number 390523135