From mbaysek at gmail.com Fri Nov 1 03:09:44 2013 From: mbaysek at gmail.com (Michael J. Baysek) Date: Fri, 1 Nov 2013 00:09:44 -0700 Subject: [Research] celebrating Dr. Liang Xiong Friday at 7pm!! In-Reply-To: <5272B137.8030705@cs.cmu.edu> References: <5272B137.8030705@cs.cmu.edu> Message-ID: As time flies, so is the future set free! Congratulations Liang. Use your gifts wisely, and always consult your heart. Cheers! -Mike On Thu, Oct 31, 2013 at 12:36 PM, Jeff Schneider wrote: > > Congratulations to Dr. Xiong for a successful PhD defense today!! Due to > the > unfortunately timed AISTATS submission deadline, we will be celebrating his > defense at 7pm *tomorrow* (Friday) evening. Please come and join us. > Also, > please let me know if you can make it so I can make appropriate > reservations. > The location is yet to be determined. I'll send a follow up with that > information. > > Jeff. > > ps. I realize that technically the AISTATS deadline is 8pm tomorrow. If > you > happen to be working past 7pm, feel free to just show up as soon as you > can and > you'll also be able to celebrate your submission too. > > pps. you're welcome to invite spouses, boy/girlfriends as well. Just let > me > know so I get the right count for the reservations. > > _______________________________________________ > Research mailing list > Research at autonlab.org > https://www.autonlab.org/mailman/listinfo/research > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From schneide at cs.cmu.edu Fri Nov 1 13:20:15 2013 From: schneide at cs.cmu.edu (Jeff Schneider) Date: Fri, 01 Nov 2013 13:20:15 -0400 Subject: [Research] celebrating Dr. Liang Xiong Friday at 7pm!! In-Reply-To: <5272B137.8030705@cs.cmu.edu> References: <5272B137.8030705@cs.cmu.edu> Message-ID: <5273E2CF.9050103@cs.cmu.edu> We will meet at 7pm at the restaurant called Eleven in the strip district (1150 Smallman St). If anyone needs a ride please let me know and we will arrange something. Also, if you did not RSVP but you are planning to come please let me know. See you this evening! Jeff. On 10/31/2013 03:36 PM, Jeff Schneider wrote: > > Congratulations to Dr. Xiong for a successful PhD defense today!! Due to the > unfortunately timed AISTATS submission deadline, we will be celebrating his > defense at 7pm *tomorrow* (Friday) evening. Please come and join us. Also, > please let me know if you can make it so I can make appropriate reservations. > The location is yet to be determined. I'll send a follow up with that information. > > Jeff. > > ps. I realize that technically the AISTATS deadline is 8pm tomorrow. If you > happen to be working past 7pm, feel free to just show up as soon as you can and > you'll also be able to celebrate your submission too. > > pps. you're welcome to invite spouses, boy/girlfriends as well. Just let me > know so I get the right count for the reservations. > > _______________________________________________ > Research mailing list > Research at autonlab.org > https://www.autonlab.org/mailman/listinfo/research > From awd at cs.cmu.edu Thu Nov 7 19:05:08 2013 From: awd at cs.cmu.edu (Artur Dubrawski) Date: Thu, 07 Nov 2013 19:05:08 -0500 Subject: [Research] Anyone interested in a bicycle ride on Saturday morning? Message-ID: <527C2AB4.7050905@cs.cmu.edu> From awd at cs.cmu.edu Fri Nov 15 15:13:06 2013 From: awd at cs.cmu.edu (Artur Dubrawski) Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2013 15:13:06 -0500 Subject: [Research] Anyone interested in a bicycle ride on Saturday morning? In-Reply-To: <527C2AB4.7050905@cs.cmu.edu> References: <527C2AB4.7050905@cs.cmu.edu> Message-ID: <52868052.9090208@cs.cmu.edu> Looping back with the same question, now regarding tomorrow. Let me know if you're interested in joining! We would meet in front of NSH at 10am. Cheers Artur On 11/7/2013 7:05 PM, Artur Dubrawski wrote: > > _______________________________________________ > Research mailing list > Research at autonlab.org > https://www.autonlab.org/mailman/listinfo/research > From schneide at cs.cmu.edu Mon Nov 18 15:15:34 2013 From: schneide at cs.cmu.edu (Jeff Schneider) Date: Mon, 18 Nov 2013 15:15:34 -0500 Subject: [Research] Fwd: Thesis Oral: Matthew Tesch In-Reply-To: <52864471.1080208@cmu.edu> References: <52864471.1080208@cmu.edu> Message-ID: <528A7566.1030902@cs.cmu.edu> Hi guys, Matt Tesch (co-advised by Howie Choset and I) will do his PhD defense on Monday. If you want to see real machine learning making a real robot do cool things, come to the defense! Jeff. -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Thesis Oral: Matthew Tesch Date: Fri, 15 Nov 2013 10:57:37 -0500 From: Suzanne Lyons Muth To: ri-people at cs.cmu.edu Date: 25 November 2013 Time: 10:00 a.m. Place: Newell Simon Hall 3305 Type: Thesis Oral Who: Matthew Tesch Topic: Improving Robot Locomotion Through Learning Methods for Expensive Black-Box Systems Abstract: The modular snake robots in Carnegie Mellon?s Biorobotics lab provide an intriguing platform for research: they have already been shown to excel at a variety of locomotive tasks and have incredible potential for navigating complex terrains, but much of that potential remains untapped. Unfortunately, many techniques commonly used in robotics prove inapplicable to these snake robots. This is because of the robots complex, multi-modal locomotion dynamics, which are difficult to model, and their small size and frequent impacts, which preclude addition of many standard sensors. The motivation to expand the capabilities of these robots stems from experiencing several failures and limitations in real world tests. In an archaeological expedition near the Red Sea, the robot was able to move further than a human could into a collapsed cave containing four-millenia-old ship timbers. However, a gradual sandy slope prevented the robot from moving further and potentially making an archaeological discovery. At a disaster response training site, the robot was able to navigate a narrow passage underneath a rubble pile, but was unable to pass over a four inch high piece of wood which lay across its path once the passage widened. This thesis addresses the improvement of these capabilities through the optimization of functions which are expensive (requiring significant time, money, computation, or other resources), black-box (providing no gradient or derivative information), need not be convex or linear, and may have many local optima. Objectives evaluated through tests on physical robotic systems often fit these categories. Several approaches are derived and tested for optimization of snake robot gait motion, leading to improved locomotion across flat and sloped terrain. Additional unique challenges posed by robotic systems are addressed, including stochasticity in the objective, consideration of multiple conflicting objectives, and the desire to adapt to changing environments. Although gaits are the motion of choice for traversing long distances over uniform terrain, real-world environments will rarely be completely uniform. Instead, complex motions also must be learned and optimized that enable navigation over complex terrain and large obstacles. To address this challenge, I describe an approach to record, simplify, and parameterize demonstrated trajectories from expert and novice users. As the settings which require such motions usually can only quantify the result of the motion in terms of success and failure rather than a numerical score, I derive extensions to the optimization framework used for improving gaits to handle stochastic binary functions, and use this to optimize robustness of trajectories for moving over obstacles. Overall, these algorithms allow snake robot locomotion through any type of environment to be optimized. Furthermore, the generality inherent in the black-box approach allows these techniques to be applicable to a wide variety of problems in robotics. Thesis Committee Members: Howie Choset, Chair Jeff Schneider Drew Bagnell Jared Cohon Stefan Schaal, University of Southern California A copy of the thesis document is available at: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~mtesch/thesis.pdf From tzukuoh at cs.cmu.edu Tue Nov 19 13:18:16 2013 From: tzukuoh at cs.cmu.edu (Tzu-Kuo Huang) Date: Tue, 19 Nov 2013 13:18:16 -0500 Subject: [Research] Ben Taskar passing away Message-ID: <057e01cee553$b781b3a0$26851ae0$@cmu.edu> Just heard about it from a friend.. http://news.cs.washington.edu/2013/11/18/ben-taskar-1977-2013/ Stay healthy.. TK -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From schneide at cs.cmu.edu Wed Nov 27 15:46:33 2013 From: schneide at cs.cmu.edu (Jeff Schneider) Date: Wed, 27 Nov 2013 15:46:33 -0500 Subject: [Research] NIPS practice poster session Message-ID: <52965A29.4080801@cs.cmu.edu> Hi Everyone! On Monday at 1pm. We will do a practice NIPS poster session in NSH A507. At a minimum, Yifei and TK will show their posters. If anyone has NIPS workshop posters that I've forgotten, please plan to bring them as well! In order to properly mimic a NIPS poster session, we will have pizza to snack on while we wander around the posters. See you Monday! Jeff.