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Autonomously constructing hierarchical task networks for planning and human-robot collaboration

Bradley Hayes, Brian Scassellati

Year
2016
Citations
95

Abstract

Collaboration between humans and robots requires solutions to an array of challenging problems, including multi-agent planning, state estimation, and goal inference. There already exist feasible solutions for many of these challenges, but they depend upon having rich task models. In this work we detail a novel type of Hierarchical Task Network we call a Clique/Chain HTN (CC-HTN), alongside an algorithm for autonomously constructing them from topological properties derived from graphical task representations. As the presented method relies on the structure of the task itself, our work imposes no particular type of symbolic insight into motor primitives or environmental representation, making it applicable to a wide variety of use cases critical to human-robot interaction. We present evaluations within a multi-resolution goal inference task and a transfer learning application showing the utility of our approach.

Keywords

Computer scienceTask (project management)RobotInferenceVariety (cybernetics)Representation (politics)Artificial intelligenceHuman–computer interactionTask analysisGraphical model

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