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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20210421T110000
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UID:4803-1619002800-1619010000@seasevents.nmsdev7.com
SUMMARY:ESE Thesis Defense: "Scalable Learning in Distributed Robot Teams"
DESCRIPTION:Mobile robots are already in use for mapping\, agriculture\, entertainment\, and the delivery of goods and people. As robotic systems continue to become more affordable\, large numbers of mobile robots may be deployed concurrently to accomplish tasks faster and more efficiently. Practical deployments of very large teams will require scalable algorithms to enable the distributed cooperation of autonomous agents. We focus on the three main algorithmic obstacles to the scalability of robot teams: coordination\, control\, and communication. \nTo address these challenges\, we design graph-based abstractions that allow us to apply Graph Neural Networks (GNNs). First\, a team of robots must continually coordinate to divide up mission requirements among all agents. We focus on the case studies of exploration and coverage to develop a spatial GNN controller that can coordinate a team of tens of agents as they visit thousands of landmarks. A routing problem of this size is intractable for existing optimization-based approaches.Second\, a robot in a team must be able to execute the trajectory that will accomplish its given sub-task. In large teams with high densities of robots\, planning and execution of safe\, collision-free trajectories may require the joint optimization over all agent trajectories\, which is impractical in large teams. We present a controller for the problem of flocking that uses delayed communication formalized via a GNN to allow aerial robots to avoid collisions and align velocities. Third\, robot teams may need to operate in harsh environments without existing communication infrastructure\, requiring the formation of ad-hoc networks to exchange information. Many algorithms for control of multi-robot teams operate under the assumption that low-latency\, global state information necessary to coordinate agent actions can readily be disseminated among the team. Our approach leverages GNNs to control the connectivity within the ad-hoc network and to provide the data distribution infrastructure necessary for countless multi-robot algorithms. \n  \nAdvisors:\nAlejandro Ribeiro\, Professor of Electrical and Systems Engineering\nVijay Kumar\, Nemirovsky Family Dean of Penn Engineering and Professor of Mechanical Engineering and AppliedMechanics\n\n\nCommittee:\nGeorge Pappas\, UPS Foundation Professor and Chair of Electrical and Systems Engineering\nRaquel Urstasun\, Professor of Computer Science\, University of Toronto\n\nChair: Victor Preciado\, Associate Professor and Graduate Chair of Electrical and Systems Engineering
URL:https://seasevents.nmsdev7.com/event/ese-thesis-defense-scalable-learning-in-distributed-robot-teams/
LOCATION:Zoom – Email kate.tolstaya@gmail.com for link
CATEGORIES:Dissertation or Thesis Defense
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