Peter Stone's Selected Publications

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MARIOnET: Motion Acquisition for Robots through Iterative Online Evaluative Training (Extended Abstract)

Adam Setapen, Michael Quinlan, and Peter Stone. MARIOnET: Motion Acquisition for Robots through Iterative Online Evaluative Training (Extended Abstract). In The Ninth International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS), International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems, May 2010.
supplemental video cited in the paper.
AAMAS 2010

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Abstract

As robots become more commonplace, the tools to facilitate knowledge transfer from human to robot will be vital, especially for non-technical users. While some ongoing work considers the role of human reinforcement in intelligent algorithms, the burden of learning is often placed solely on the computer. These approaches neglect the expressive capabilities of humans, especially regarding our ability to quickly refine motor skills. Thus, when designing autonomous robots that interact with humans, not only is it important to leverage machine learning, but it is also very useful to have the tools in place to facilitate the transfer of knowledge between man and machine. We introduce such a tool for enabling a human to transfer motion learning capabilities to a robot. In this paper, we propose a general framework for Motion Acquisition for Robots through Iterative Online Evaluative Training (MARIOnET). Specifically, MARIOnET represents a direct and real-time interface between a human in a motion-capture suit and a robot, with a training process that provides a convenient human interface and requires no technical knowledge. Our approach exploits the ability at which humans are able to learn and refine fine-motor skills. Implemented on two robots (one quadruped and one biped), our results indicate that both technical and non-technical users are able to harness MARIOnET to quickly improve a robot's performance of a task requiring fine-motor skills.

BibTeX Entry

@InProceedings{AAMAS10-setapen,
  author="Adam Setapen and Michael Quinlan and Peter Stone",
  title = {MARIOnET: Motion Acquisition for Robots through Iterative Online Evaluative Training (Extended Abstract)},
  booktitle = "The Ninth International Conference on Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems (AAMAS)",
  location = "Toronto, Canada",
  month = "May",
  year = "2010",
  publisher = {International Foundation for Autonomous Agents and Multiagent Systems},
  abstract  = { 
	As robots become more commonplace, the tools to facilitate knowledge
	transfer from human to robot will be vital, especially for non-technical
	users. While some ongoing work considers the role of human reinforcement
	in intelligent algorithms, the burden of learning is often placed solely
	on the computer. These approaches neglect the expressive capabilities of
	humans, especially regarding our ability to quickly refine motor skills.
	Thus, when designing autonomous robots that interact with humans, not
	only is it important to leverage machine learning, but it is also very
	useful to have the tools in place to facilitate the transfer of
	knowledge between man and machine. We introduce such a tool for enabling
	a human to transfer motion learning capabilities to a robot. In this
	paper, we propose a general framework for Motion Acquisition for Robots
	through Iterative Online Evaluative Training (MARIOnET).  Specifically,
	MARIOnET represents a direct and real-time interface between a human in
	a motion-capture suit and a robot, with a training process that provides
	a convenient human interface and requires no technical knowledge. Our
	approach exploits the ability at which humans are able to learn and
	refine fine-motor skills.  Implemented on two robots (one quadruped and
	one biped), our results indicate that both technical and non-technical
	users are able to harness MARIOnET to quickly improve a robot's
	performance of a task requiring fine-motor skills.  },
  wwwnote={<a href="http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~AustinVilla/?p=research/marionet">supplemental video</a> cited in the paper.<br /> <a href="http://www.cse.yorku.ca/AAMAS2010/">AAMAS 2010</a>},
}

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