The bionic DBMS is coming, but what will it look like?
Ryan Johnson, Ippokratis Pandis
CIDR 2013
Concept learning in robotics is an extremely challenging problem: sensory data is often high dimensional, and noisy due to specularities and other irregularities. In this paper, we investigate two general strategies to speed up learning, based on spatial decomposition of the sensory representation, and simultaneous learning of multiple classes using a shared structure. We study two concept learning scenarios: a hallway navigation problem, where the robot has to induce features such as "opening" or "wall". The second task is recycling, where the robot has to learn to recognize objects, such as a "trash can". We use a common underlying function approximator in both studies in the form of a feedforward neural network, with several hundred input units and multiple output units. Despite the high degree of freedom afforded by such an approximator, we show the two strategies provide sufficient bias to achieve rapid learning. We provide detailed experimental studies on an actual mobile robot called PAVLOV to illustrate the effectiveness of this approach.
Ryan Johnson, Ippokratis Pandis
CIDR 2013
Jehanzeb Mirza, Leonid Karlinsky, et al.
NeurIPS 2023
Leonid Karlinsky, Joseph Shtok, et al.
CVPR 2019
Yannis Belkhiter, Dhaval Salwala, et al.
NFV-SDN 2025