View order







Type of content

 
 
 
 
 
 

Language

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Year

From:
To:

 


...Search a Keyword

 
 
event header image

Workshop on Regression in Robotics 2009 - Seattle   

International Workshop on Regression in Robotics - Approaches and Applications, Seattle 2009

Function approximation from noisy data is a central task in robot learning. Relevant problems include sensor modeling, manipulation, control, and many others. A large number of function approximation methods have been proposed from statistics, machine learning, and control system theory to address robotics-related issues such as online updates, active sampling, high dimensionality, non-homogeneous noise, and missing features.

In this workshop, we would like to develop a common understanding of the benefits and drawbacks of different function approximation approaches and to derive practical guidelines for selecting a suitable approach to a given problem.

In addition, we would like to discuss two key points of criticism in current robot learning research. First, data-driven machine learning methods do, in fact, not necessarily outperform models designed by human experts and we would like to explore what function approximation problems in robotics really have to be learned. Second, function approximation/regression methods are typically evaluated using different metrics and data sets, making standardized comparisons challenging.

For more information visit the Workshop website.

Categories

Lectures

Panel Session

[syn]  4646 views, 44:46  
flagPanel Discussion Panel Discussion
Christian Plagemann, Dieter Fox, et al. Christian Plagemann, Dieter Fox, Andreas Krause, Raia Hadsell, Pieter Abbeel, Nicholas Roy, Jo-Anne Ting, Rajesh P. N. Rao, Jan Peters

Write your own review or comment:

make sure you have javascript enabled or clear this field: