18 results on '"Christopher Funk"'
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2. 1st ACM SIGKDD Workshop on Ethical Artificial Intelligence
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Chen Zhao, Feng Chen, Xintao Wu, Christopher Funk, and Anthony Hoogs
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- 2022
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3. Novelty Detection in Remote Sensing Imagery
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Dawei Du, Christopher Funk, and Anthony Hoogs
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- 2022
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4. MEVID: Multi-view Extended Videos with Identities for Video Person Re-Identification
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Daniel Davila, Dawei Du, Bryon Lewis, Christopher Funk, Joseph Van Pelt, Roderic Collins, Kellie Corona, Matt Brown, Scott McCloskey, Anthony Hoogs, and Brian Clipp
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV) ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
In this paper, we present the Multi-view Extended Videos with Identities (MEVID) dataset for large-scale, video person re-identification (ReID) in the wild. To our knowledge, MEVID represents the most-varied video person ReID dataset, spanning an extensive indoor and outdoor environment across nine unique dates in a 73-day window, various camera viewpoints, and entity clothing changes. Specifically, we label the identities of 158 unique people wearing 598 outfits taken from 8, 092 tracklets, average length of about 590 frames, seen in 33 camera views from the very large-scale MEVA person activities dataset. While other datasets have more unique identities, MEVID emphasizes a richer set of information about each individual, such as: 4 outfits/identity vs. 2 outfits/identity in CCVID, 33 viewpoints across 17 locations vs. 6 in 5 simulated locations for MTA, and 10 million frames vs. 3 million for LS-VID. Being based on the MEVA video dataset, we also inherit data that is intentionally demographically balanced to the continental United States. To accelerate the annotation process, we developed a semi-automatic annotation framework and GUI that combines state-of-the-art real-time models for object detection, pose estimation, person ReID, and multi-object tracking. We evaluate several state-of-the-art methods on MEVID challenge problems and comprehensively quantify their robustness in terms of changes of outfit, scale, and background location. Our quantitative analysis on the realistic, unique aspects of MEVID shows that there are significant remaining challenges in video person ReID and indicates important directions for future research., Comment: This paper was accepted to WACV 2023
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- 2022
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5. Cascade Transformers for End-to-End Person Search
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Rui Yu, Dawei Du, Rodney LaLonde, Daniel Davila, Christopher Funk, Anthony Hoogs, and Brian Clipp
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (cs.CV) ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION - Abstract
The goal of person search is to localize a target person from a gallery set of scene images, which is extremely challenging due to large scale variations, pose/viewpoint changes, and occlusions. In this paper, we propose the Cascade Occluded Attention Transformer (COAT) for end-to-end person search. Our three-stage cascade design focuses on detecting people in the first stage, while later stages simultaneously and progressively refine the representation for person detection and re-identification. At each stage the occluded attention transformer applies tighter intersection over union thresholds, forcing the network to learn coarse-to-fine pose/scale invariant features. Meanwhile, we calculate each detection's occluded attention to differentiate a person's tokens from other people or the background. In this way, we simulate the effect of other objects occluding a person of interest at the token-level. Through comprehensive experiments, we demonstrate the benefits of our method by achieving state-of-the-art performance on two benchmark datasets., Comment: Accepted to CVPR 2022 Code can be found at https://github.com/Kitware/COAT
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- 2022
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6. Fibrinogen Concentrate in the Special Operations Forces Environment
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Jeannie Callum, Christopher Funk, Barto Nascimento, Henry Peng, Homer Tien, Sandro Rizoli, Joanne Schmid, Shawn G. Rhind, Steven Sanders, and Andrew Beckett
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Canada ,Warfare ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Resuscitation ,Hemorrhage ,Damage control resuscitation ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Fibrinogen ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Battlefield ,medicine ,Humans ,Clinical efficacy ,Cold chain ,Intensive care medicine ,Compatibility testing ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,030208 emergency & critical care medicine ,General Medicine ,Military Personnel ,Cryoprecipitate ,Fresh frozen plasma ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
Introduction Hemorrhage is the most common cause of death among Special Operations Force (SOF) soldiers. Bringing remote damage control resuscitation into the far-forward combat environment is logistically challenging, as it requires blood products that generally require a robust cold chain. Alternatively, lyophilized products such as fibrinogen concentrate, which does not require thawing or blood group compatibility testing before use, might be advantageous in damage control resuscitation in the battlefield. In this report, we review the evidence for the use of fibrinogen concentrate in the Canadian SOF environment. Materials and methods The literature on the use of fibrinogen concentrate in the trauma setting was reviewed by Canadian Forces Services Working Group, in three separate meetings. Multiple stakeholders were consulted to obtain authoritative perspectives from subject matter experts on the use of fibrinogen concentrate in the Canadian SOF environment. We also conducted a comparison review of fibrinogen content, pathogen risk, shelf life, and methods required for use for fresh frozen plasma, cryoprecipitate, and fibrinogen concentrate relevant to their application in the far-forward combat environment. Results Indications and a protocol for the use of fibrinogen as an adjunct to fresh whole blood were formulated based on a literature review and clinical expert opinion. Alternative strategies and other lyophilized blood products were considered before selecting fibrinogen concentrate as the lyophilized blood product of choice. Fibrinogen concentrate is an ABO-universal blood product with an excellent safety profile. Training was conducted by subject matter experts within civilian trauma centers and at military training facilities. The clinical efficacy and safety were confirmed by monitoring the use of fibrinogen concentrate in deployed combat settings. Conclusion Fibrinogen concentrate is a useful adjunct to remote damage control resuscitation in the SOF environment. Fibrinogen concentrate was found to be robust for transport into the SOF environment and is widely accepted among SOF operators and medics.
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- 2017
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7. From Image to Stability: Learning Dynamics from Human Pose
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Yanxi Liu, Bharadwaj Ravichandran, Christopher Funk, Jesse Scott, and Robert T. Collins
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Sequence ,Computer science ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,Key (cryptography) ,Stability (learning theory) ,Computer vision ,Kinematics ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Cross-validation ,Image (mathematics) ,Center of pressure (fluid mechanics) - Abstract
We propose and validate two end-to-end deep learning architectures to learn foot pressure distribution maps (dynamics) from 2D or 3D human pose (kinematics). The networks are trained using 1.36 million synchronized pose+pressure data pairs from 10 subjects performing multiple takes of a 5-min long choreographed Taiji sequence. Using leave-one-subject-out cross validation, we demonstrate reliable and repeatable foot pressure prediction, setting the first baseline for solving a non-obvious pose to pressure cross-modality mapping problem in computer vision. Furthermore, we compute and quantitatively validate Center of Pressure (CoP) and Base of Support (BoS), two key components for stability analysis, from the predicted foot pressure distributions.
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- 2020
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8. Wie wird ein Unternehmen agil, attraktiv und aufmerksamkeitserregend – und bleibt es auch dauerhaft?
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Patrick Müller, Robindro Ullah, Irina Hagen, Diana Roth, Lorenzo Scibetta, Daniel Walzer, Christopher Funk, and Ralph Dannhäuser
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Das erste Kapitel beschaftigt sich mit den Prinzipien eines zeitgenossischen und agilen HR-Managements. Eine besondere Bedeutung hat dabei das Employer Branding. Dazu gehoren auch die Fragen: Warum ist Retaining wichtiger als Recruiting? Welche Tools aus der Start-up-Welt konnen auch KMU helfen, Young Professionals zu gewinnen und zu binden?
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- 2019
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9. Fresh whole blood transfusion capability for Special Operations Forces
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Jeannie Callum, Homer Tien, Christopher Funk, Andrew Beckett, Elon Glassberg, Joanne Schmid, and Luis Teodoro da Luz
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Canada ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Discussions in Surgery ,Blood transfusion ,Best practice ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hemorrhage ,Environment ,Tertiary care ,Retrospective data ,Humans ,Medicine ,Blood Transfusion ,Iraq War, 2003-2011 ,Whole blood ,Afghan Campaign 2001 ,business.industry ,Afghanistan ,medicine.disease ,humanities ,Surgery ,Military personnel ,Military Personnel ,Oxygen-carrying ,Iraq ,Wounds and Injuries ,Medical emergency ,business ,Blood bank - Abstract
Fresh whole blood (FWB) transfusion is an option for providing volume and oxygen carrying capacity to bleeding Special Operations soldiers who are injured in an austere environment and who are far from a regular blood bank. Retrospective data from recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan show an association between the use of FWB and survival. We reviewed the literature to document the issues surrounding FWB transfusion to Special Operations soldiers in the austere environment and surveyed the literature regarding best practice guidelines for and patient outcomes after FWB transfusions. Most literature regarding FWB transfusion is retrospective or historical. There is limited prospective evidence currently to change transfusion practice in tertiary care facilities, but FWB remains an option in the austere setting.
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- 2015
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10. 2017 ICCV Challenge: Detecting Symmetry in the Wild
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Stavros Tsogkas, Seungkyu Lee, Yanxi Liu, Andrea Cohen, Wei Shen, Martin R. Oswald, Sven Dickinson, and Christopher Funk
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Computer science ,business.industry ,020207 software engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,computer.software_genre ,Dual (category theory) ,Homogeneous space ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Artificial intelligence ,Data mining ,Symmetry (geometry) ,business ,computer - Abstract
Motivated by various new applications of computational symmetry in computer vision and in an effort to advance machine perception of symmetry in the wild, we organize the third international symmetry detection challenge at ICCV 2017, after the CVPR 2011/2013 symmetry detection competitions. Our goal is to gauge the progress in computational symmetry with continuous benchmarking of both new algorithms and datasets, as well as more polished validation methodology. Different from previous years, this time we expand our training/testing data sets to include 3D data, and establish the most comprehensive and largest annotated datasets for symmetry detection to date; we also expand the types of symmetries to include densely-distributed and medial-axis-like symmetries; furthermore, we establish a challenge-and-paper dual track mechanism where both algorithms and articles on symmetry-related research are solicited. In this report, we provide a detailed summary of our evaluation methodology for each type of symmetry detection algorithm validated. We demonstrate and analyze quantified detection results in terms of precision-recall curves and F-measures for all algorithms evaluated. We also offer a short survey of the paper-track submissions accepted for our 2017 symmetry challenge.
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- 2017
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11. 4D Model-Based Spatiotemporal Alignment of Scripted Taiji Quan Sequences
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Jesse Scott, Robert T. Collins, Yanxi Liu, and Christopher Funk
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Matching (graph theory) ,Computer science ,Orientation (computer vision) ,business.industry ,Feature extraction ,Video camera ,02 engineering and technology ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Motion capture ,Motion (physics) ,law.invention ,law ,Synchronization (computer science) ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,020201 artificial intelligence & image processing ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
We develop a computational tool that aligns motion capture (mocap) data to videos of 24-form simplified Taiji (TaiChi) Quan, a scripted motion sequence about 5 minutes long. With only prior knowledge that the subjects in video and mocap perform a similar pose sequence, we establish inter-subject temporal synchronization and spatial alignment of mocap and video based on body joint correspondences. Through time alignment and matching the viewpoint and orientation of the video camera, the 3D body joints from mocap data of subject A can be correctly projected onto the video performance of subject B. Initial quantitative evaluation of this alignment method shows promise in offering the first validated algorithmic treatment for cross-subject comparison of Taiji Quan performances. This work opens the door to subject-specific quantified comparison of long motion sequences beyond Taiji.
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- 2017
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12. Symmetry reCAPTCHA
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Christopher Funk and Yanxi Liu
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- 2016
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13. The Integrated Patent Instrument
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Christopher Funk
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Negotiation ,Trademark ,Patent troll ,Law ,Political science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Trial court ,Intellectual property ,Settlement (litigation) ,Legal instrument ,Supreme court ,media_common - Abstract
Inventors who apply for a patent at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) routinely negotiate with the PTO over the patent’s scope. The written record of that negotiation is called the prosecution history. For the past three decades, courts have held (and many scholars have assumed) that this written record is “intrinsic evidence” to a patent. On that basis, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reviews de novo a trial court’s findings based on a prosecution history when construing the scope of a patent — as if such findings were pure determinations of law. That approach to prosecution history recently won the U.S. Supreme Court’s approval in Teva Pharmaceuticals USA, Inc. v. Sandoz, Inc. But by blessing the Federal Circuit’s approach, the Court perpetuated a review system that encourages appeals, discourages settlement, and prolongs expensive litigation when trial courts determine the outcome of a case based on a prosecution history. In short, de novo review of the prosecution history foments litigation and taxes innovators.This Article argues that treating prosecution history as intrinsic evidence is incorrect in concept and inconsistent with a patent as an integrated legal instrument. Instead of the prevailing view, this Article suggests that contract principles provide a coherent paradigm through which courts and scholars can understand a patent and its history. Those principles frame patents as integrated instruments; prosecution histories as extrinsic evidence; and findings based on those histories as determinations of fact, not law. This paradigm suggests a sea change in how the Federal Circuit should review patent constructions — namely, the court should review findings based on prosecution histories for clear error only, like other factual questions, not de novo, like pure questions of law. By reviewing such findings for clear error, the Federal Circuit can discourage appeals, avoid unnecessary remands, and thereby reduce costs in cases where factual inquiries based on the prosecution history drive the final construction of a patent.
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- 2015
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14. Subtotal Pedal Amputations
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Gregg Young and Christopher Funk
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Treatment outcome ,General Medicine ,Surgical correction ,medicine.disease ,Diabetic foot ,Surgery ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Amputation ,Medicine ,Proper treatment ,business - Abstract
Proper treatment for the compromised diabetic foot often requires surgical correction and subtotal pedal amputation. This article discusses various levels of amputation of the human foot, including digital, ray, transmetatarsal, midfoot, and Syme amputations. Surgical techniques and biomechanical considerations are presented in order to assist the surgeon in planning for the most functional outcome of the patient. A review of the literature and the experiences of the authors are presented. (J Am Podiatr Med Assoc 91(1): 6-12, 2001)
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- 2001
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15. A cognitive approach to vision for a mobile robot
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D. Paul Benjamin, Damian M. Lyons, and Christopher Funk
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business.industry ,Machine vision ,Computer science ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Point cloud ,Mobile robot ,Cognitive architecture ,Virtual reality ,Visual processing ,Computer graphics (images) ,Robot ,Computer vision ,Artificial intelligence ,Soar ,business - Abstract
We describe a cognitive vision system for a mobile robot. This system works in a manner similar to the human vision system, using saccadic, vergence and pursuit movements to extract information from visual input. At each fixation, the system builds a 3D model of a small region, combining information about distance, shape, texture and motion. These 3D models are embedded within an overall 3D model of the robot's environment. This approach turns the computer vision problem into a search problem, with the goal of constructing a physically realistic model of the entire environment. At each step, the vision system selects a point in the visual input to focus on. The distance, shape, texture and motion information are computed in a small region and used to build a mesh in a 3D virtual world. Background knowledge is used to extend this structure as appropriate, e.g. if a patch of wall is seen, it is hypothesized to be part of a large wall and the entire wall is created in the virtual world, or if part of an object is recognized, the whole object's mesh is retrieved from the library of objects and placed into the virtual world. The difference between the input from the real camera and from the virtual camera is compared using local Gaussians, creating an error mask that indicates the main differences between them. This is then used to select the next points to focus on. This approach permits us to use very expensive algorithms on small localities, thus generating very accurate models. It also is task-oriented, permitting the robot to use its knowledge about its task and goals to decide which parts of the environment need to be examined. The software components of this architecture include PhysX for the 3D virtual world, OpenCV and the Point Cloud Library for visual processing, and the Soar cognitive architecture, which controls the perceptual processing and robot planning. The hardware is a custom-built pan-tilt stereo color camera. We describe experiments using both static and moving objects.
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- 2013
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16. Osseous metaplasia in plantar fibromatosis: A case report
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Richard C. Mott, Christopher Funk, David G. Armstrong, Brent P. Nixon, and Michael B. DeBrule
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musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Fibroma ,Bone and Bones ,Fasciotomy ,Foot Diseases ,Lesion ,stomatognathic system ,Metaplasia ,Humans ,Medicine ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Fascia ,Plantar fibromatosis ,business.industry ,Fibromatosis ,Middle Aged ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,stomatognathic diseases ,Female ,Osseous metaplasia ,medicine.symptom ,Foot surgery ,business ,human activities - Abstract
A case report about extensive osseous metaplasia of a plantar fibromatosis is presented. The authors are unaware of previous reports in the literature describing osseous metaplasia within plantar fibromatosis in this manner. This case shows that plantar fibromatosis may undergo osseous metaplasia in a fashion similar to fibromatous lesions elsewhere.
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- 2004
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17. LabelMeSymmetry: a tool for human symmetry perception
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Yanxi Liu and Christopher Funk
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Physics ,Ophthalmology ,Theoretical physics ,Perception ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Symmetry (geometry) ,Sensory Systems ,media_common - Published
- 2016
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18. Using a virtual world for robot planning
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Yixia Lin, Damian M. Lyons, Christopher Funk, D. Paul Benjamin, and John V. Monaco
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Computer science ,business.industry ,Cognitive architecture ,Virtual reality ,Object (computer science) ,Visual processing ,Software ,Human–computer interaction ,Component (UML) ,Component-based software engineering ,Robot ,Computer vision ,Soar ,Artificial intelligence ,business - Abstract
We are building a robot cognitive architecture that constructs a real-time virtual copy of itself and its environment, including people, and uses the model to process perceptual information and to plan its movements. This paper describes the structure of this architecture. The software components of this architecture include PhysX for the virtual world, OpenCV and the Point Cloud Library for visual processing, and the Soar cognitive architecture that controls the perceptual processing and task planning. The RS (Robot Schemas) language is implemented in Soar, providing the ability to reason about concurrency and time. This Soar/RS component controls visual processing, deciding which objects and dynamics to render into PhysX, and the degree of detail required for the task. As the robot runs, its virtual model diverges from physical reality, and errors grow. The Match-Mediated Difference component monitors these errors by comparing the visual data with corresponding data from virtual cameras, and notifies Soar/RS of significant differences, e.g. a new object that appears, or an object that changes direction unexpectedly. Soar/RS can then run PhysX much faster than real-time and search among possible future world paths to plan the robot's actions. We report experimental results in indoor environments.
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- 2012
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