ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
This work studies the problem of image-goal navigation, which entails guiding robots with noisy sensors and controls through real crowded environments. Recent fruitful approaches rely on deep reinforcement learning and learn navigation policies in simulation environments that are much simpler in complexity than real environments. Directly transferring these trained policies to real environments can be extremely challenging or even dangerous. We tackle this problem with a hierarchical navigation method composed of four decoupled modules. The first module maintains an obstacle map during robot navigation. The second one predicts a long-term goal on the real-time map periodically. The third one plans collision-free command sets for navigating to long-term goals, while the final module stops the robot properly near the goal image. The four modules are developed separately to suit the image-goal navigation in real crowded scenarios. In addition, the hierarchical decomposition decouples the learning of navigation goal planning, collision avoidance and navigation ending prediction, which cuts down the search space during navigation training and helps improve the generalization to previously unseen real scenes. We evaluate the method in both a simulator and the real world with a mobile robot. The results show that our method outperforms several navigation baselines and can successfully achieve navigation tasks in these scenarios.
Maintaining social distancing norms between humans has become an indispensable precaution to slow down the transmission of COVID-19. We present a novel method to automatically detect pairs of humans in a crowded scenario who are not adhering to the s
We focus on the problem of planning the motion of a robot in a dynamic multiagent environment such as a pedestrian scene. Enabling the robot to navigate safely and in a socially compliant fashion in such scenes requires a representation that accounts
Mobile robots have become more and more popular in our daily life. In large-scale and crowded environments, how to navigate safely with localization precision is a critical problem. To solve this problem, we proposed a curiosity-based framework that
In this work, we present a memory-augmented approach for image-goal navigation. Earlier attempts, including RL-based and SLAM-based approaches have either shown poor generalization performance, or are heavily-reliant on pose/depth sensors. Our method
We present CoMet, a novel approach for computing a groups cohesion and using that to improve a robots navigation in crowded scenes. Our approach uses a novel cohesion-metric that builds on prior work in social psychology. We compute this metric by ut