DocumentCode
716416
Title
Grounding spatial relations for outdoor robot navigation
Author
Boularias, Abdeslam ; Duvallet, Felix ; Oh, Jean ; Stentz, Anthony
Author_Institution
Robot. Inst., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2015
fDate
26-30 May 2015
Firstpage
1976
Lastpage
1982
Abstract
We propose a language-driven navigation approach for commanding mobile robots in outdoor environments. We consider unknown environments that contain previously unseen objects. The proposed approach aims at making interactions in human-robot teams natural. Robots receive from human teammates commands in natural language, such as “Navigate around the building to the car left of the fire hydrant and near the tree”. A robot needs first to classify its surrounding objects into categories, using images obtained from its sensors. The result of this classification is a map of the environment, where each object is given a list of semantic labels, such as “tree” and “car”, with varying degrees of confidence. Then, the robot needs to ground the nouns in the command. Grounding, the main focus of this paper, is mapping each noun in the command into a physical object in the environment. We use a probabilistic model for interpreting the spatial relations, such as “left of” and “near”. The model is learned from examples provided by humans. For each noun in the command, a distribution on the objects in the environment is computed by combining spatial constraints with a prior given as the semantic classifier´s confidence values. The robot needs also to ground the navigation mode specified in the command, such as “navigate quickly” and “navigate covertly”, as a cost map. The cost map is also learned from examples, using Inverse Optimal Control (IOC). The cost map and the grounded goal are used to generate a path for the robot. This approach is evaluated on a robot in a real-world environment. Our experiments clearly show that the proposed approach is efficient for commanding outdoor robots.
Keywords
human-robot interaction; mobile robots; optimal control; path planning; statistical analysis; IOC; commanding mobile robots; commanding outdoor robots; confidence degree; cost map; human-robot team; inverse optimal control; language-driven navigation approach; object classification; outdoor robot navigation; path generation; probabilistic model; semantic classifier; semantic labels; spatial constraints; spatial relations; Buildings; Cost function; Grounding; Joints; Navigation; Robots; Semantics;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Robotics and Automation (ICRA), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location
Seattle, WA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ICRA.2015.7139457
Filename
7139457
Link To Document