Proactively perceiving others’ intentions is a crucial skill to effectively interact in unstructured, dynamic and novel environments. This work proposes a first step towards embedding this skill in support robots for search and rescue missions. Predicting the responders’ intentions, indeed, will enable exploration approaches which will identify and prioritise areas that are more relevant for the responder and, thus, for the task, leading to the development of safer, more robust and efficient joint exploration strategies. More specifically, this paper presents an active intention recognition paradigm to perceive, even under sensory constraints, not only the target’s position but also the first responder’s movements, which can provide information on his/her intentions (e.g. reaching the position where he/she expects the target to be). This mechanism is implemented by employing an extension of Monte-Carlo-based planning techniques for partially observable environments, where the reward function is augmented with an entropy reduction bonus. We test in simulation several configurations of reward augmentation, both information theoretic and not, as well as belief state approximations and obtain substantial improvements over the basic approach.

Ognibene, D., Mirante, L., Marchegiani, L. (2019). Proactive Intention Recognition for Joint Human-Robot Search and Rescue Missions through Monte-Carlo Planning in POMDP Environments. In International Conference on Social Robotics 2019 (pp.332-343). Springer [10.1007/978-3-030-35888-4_31].

Proactive Intention Recognition for Joint Human-Robot Search and Rescue Missions through Monte-Carlo Planning in POMDP Environments

Ognibene D
Primo
;
2019

Abstract

Proactively perceiving others’ intentions is a crucial skill to effectively interact in unstructured, dynamic and novel environments. This work proposes a first step towards embedding this skill in support robots for search and rescue missions. Predicting the responders’ intentions, indeed, will enable exploration approaches which will identify and prioritise areas that are more relevant for the responder and, thus, for the task, leading to the development of safer, more robust and efficient joint exploration strategies. More specifically, this paper presents an active intention recognition paradigm to perceive, even under sensory constraints, not only the target’s position but also the first responder’s movements, which can provide information on his/her intentions (e.g. reaching the position where he/she expects the target to be). This mechanism is implemented by employing an extension of Monte-Carlo-based planning techniques for partially observable environments, where the reward function is augmented with an entropy reduction bonus. We test in simulation several configurations of reward augmentation, both information theoretic and not, as well as belief state approximations and obtain substantial improvements over the basic approach.
paper
Active intention recognition; Active perception; Active vision;
English
11th International Conference on Social Robotics, ICSR 2019 - 26 November 2019 through 29 November 2019
2019
Salichs, MA; Ge, SS; Barakova, EI; Cabibihan, JJ; Wagner, AR; Castro-González, A; He, H
International Conference on Social Robotics 2019
978-3-030-35887-7
2019
11876
332
343
reserved
Ognibene, D., Mirante, L., Marchegiani, L. (2019). Proactive Intention Recognition for Joint Human-Robot Search and Rescue Missions through Monte-Carlo Planning in POMDP Environments. In International Conference on Social Robotics 2019 (pp.332-343). Springer [10.1007/978-3-030-35888-4_31].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/301358
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