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Approximate Distributed Spatiotemporal Topic Models for Multi-Robot Terrain Characterization

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Doherty, Kevin
Flaspohler, Genevieve Elaine
Roy, Nicholas
Girdhar, Yogesh
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Doherty, Kevin
Flaspohler, Genevieve Elaine
Roy, Nicholas
Girdhar, Yogesh
Source :
MIT web domain
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Unsupervised learning techniques, such as Bayesian topic models, are capable of discovering latent structure directly from raw data. These unsupervised models can endow robots with the ability to learn from their observations without human supervision, and then use the learned models for tasks such as autonomous exploration, adaptive sampling, or surveillance. This paper extends single-robot topic models to the domain of multiple robots. The main difficulty of this extension lies in achieving and maintaining global consensus among the unsupervised models learned locally by each robot. This is especially challenging for multi-robot teams operating in communication-constrained environments, such as marine robots. We present a novel approach for multi-robot distributed learning in which each robot maintains a local topic model to categorize its observations and model parameters are shared to achieve global consensus. We apply a combinatorial optimization procedure that combines local robot topic distributions into a globally consistent model based on topic similarity, which we find mitigates topic drift when compared to a baseline approach that matches topics naïvely, We evaluate our methods experimentally by demonstrating multi-robot underwater terrain characterization using simulated missions on real seabed imagery. Our proposed method achieves similar model quality under bandwidth-constraints to that achieved by models that continuously communicate, despite requiring less than one percent of the data transmission needed for continuous communication.<br />National Science Foundation (Award 1734400)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
MIT web domain
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1239993840
Document Type :
Electronic Resource