Monday
May 2
4:00 - 4:50 PM 
Kelley 1001

Bill Smart 
Associate Professor
Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Washington University


Shared Autonomy Interfaces for Mobile Manipulation Robots

One of the goals of robotics is to create completely autonomous systems, 
capable of performing useful work in the real world. However, achieving 
fully-autonomous behavior in realistic environments is hard, and relies of 
solving key problems in perception, high- and low-level planning, and a number 
of other areas. An alternative approach is to use human supervisory input, 
allowing the robot to ask for help when it is unsure of what to do. This shared 
autonomy control will allow us to deploy practically-useful systems sooner, 
without having to completely solve all of the hard underlying problems first. 
In this talk, I will discuss how human supervisory input can be integrated into 
mostly-autonomous robot systems, and will give examples of a number of 
interfaces currently under development at Washington University and Willow 
Garage.


Biography

Bill Smart is an Associate Professor of Computer Science and Engineering at 
Washington University in St. Louis, where he co-directs the Media and Machines 
Laboratory. His research interests lie in the areas of mobile robotics, machine 
learning, human-robot interaction, and brain-computer interfaces. He is 
currently on sabbatical at Willow Garage, an unusual robotics company in the 
San Francisco Bay area.


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