Integrating Planning and Recognition to Close the Interaction Loop

Authors

  • Richard Freedman University of Massachusetts Amherst

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.9815

Keywords:

Plan Recognition, Activity Recognition, Planning, LDA

Abstract

In many real-world domains, the presence of machines is becoming more ubiquitous to the point that they are usually more than simple automation tools. As part of the environment amongst human users, it is necessary for these computers and robots to be able to interact with them reasonably by either working independently around them or participating in a task, especially one with which a person needs help. This interactive procedure requires several steps: recognizing the user and environment from sensor data, interpreting the user’s activity and motives, determining a responsive behavior, performing the behavior, and then recognizing everything again to confirm the behavior choice and replan if necessary. At the moment, the research areas addressing these steps, activity recognition, plan recognition, intent recognition, and planning, have all been primarily studied independently. However, pipelining each independent process can be risky in real-time situations where there may be enough time to only run a few steps. This leads to a critical question: how do we perform everything under time constraints? In this thesis summary, I propose a framework that integrates these processes by taking advantage of features shared between them.

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Published

2016-03-05

How to Cite

Freedman, R. (2016). Integrating Planning and Recognition to Close the Interaction Loop. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v30i1.9815