Robotic Perception and Mapping: Emerging Techniques
Monday, May 23, 2022
Philadelphia (PA), USA
Announcements:
Outcome: The workshop had the highest number of registrants among all ICRA workshops/tutorials. We are grateful to all who participated. The workshop recording is posted on YouTube.
Speaker slides: Slides can be downloaded from this page.
High registration: The workshop now has 1170 registrants (608 in-person, 562 virtual). We are excited and look forward to seeing you!
Live broadcast: The workshop Zoom link is available at https://events.infovaya.com/session?id=14353. To access the link, you need to register for ICRA (virtual access is free) and create an account on Infovaya.
Contributions: Accepted submissions are posted and are available for download.
Posters: While optional, we encourage authors of accepted papers to prepare a poster of their work. Posters will be displayed in a central hallway on poster boards - boards will be provided. Authors are responsible for printing their posters. Each poster should fit within a 4 foot x 4 foot space.
High number of submissions: We received 48 paper submissions. We are grateful to all researchers who contributed to the workshop.
Outline
This workshop aims to present the latest results on the theory and practice of learning and algorithmic techniques for robotic perception and mapping. A series of contributed and invited talks by academic leaders and renowned researchers will discuss ground-breaking perception and mapping methods based on optimization and filtering, learning and data-driven models, uncertainty-aware and certifiable perception, multi-agent and distributed mapping, semantic representation, and mesh-based compression. The workshop will also discuss the current challenges and research directions in the next 5-10 years, and will include posters and spotlight talks to facilitate interaction between the speakers and the audience. The workshop plans to have a hybrid format with in-person speakers/attendees and a live broadcast to convey the message to a broader audience. Talk recordings and accepted contributions will be published on the workshop's webpage to broaden the research impact.
Expected outcome:
By facilitating discussion among participants, authors of contributed papers, and invited speakers, the workshop aims to study and answer the following fundamental questions:
1) What are the latest results and emerging research directions for algorithmic perception and mapping (such as optimization and graph-theoretic techniques)?
2) What are the latest results and emerging research directions for end-to-end and data-driven robotic perception and mapping?
3) How can existing solutions be used in multi-robot and distributed settings with asynchronous and/or incremental data?
4) How to utilize these methods in real-time systems with limited computational resources or in distributed systems with limited communication capacity and what are the trade-offs?
5) What are the correct notions, quantifications, and measures of accuracy for perception and mapping?
6) How is "failure" defined in perception and mapping and what is the consequence of failure in downstream applications?
Invited speakers & Panelists:
UC San Diego, USA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Technical University of Munich, Germany
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Imperial College London, UK
Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
University of Michigan, USA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
University of Delaware, USA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Hanyang University, South Korea
Carnegie Mellon University, USA
University of Pennsylvania, USA
Schedule:
Date: Monday, May 23, 2022
Time: 8:30-15:50 US Eastern Daylight Time
Schedule:
8:30 - 10:00 Session 1:
8:30-8:40 Welcome message by organizers
8:40-9:00 Daniel Cremers
9:00-9:20 Luca Carlone
9:20-9:40 Kostas Daniilidis
9:40-9:50 Spotlight talk 1: "Differentiable Nonparametric Belief Propagation," Anthony Opipari et al.
9:50 - 10:20 Coffee break & posters
10:20 - 12:00 Session 2:
10:20-10:40 Frank Dellaert
10:40-11:00 Nikolay Atansov
11:00-11:20 Jonathan How
11:20-12:00 Panel discussion: Atanasov, Davison, Dellaert, Leonard
12:00 - 13:00 Lunch break & posters
13:00 - 14:00 Session 3:
13:00-13:20 Andrew Davison
13:20-13:40 Jongwoo Lim
13:40-14:00 Sebastian Scherer
14:00-14:10 Spotlight talk 2: "Discrete-Continuous Smoothing and Mapping," Kevin Doherty et al.
14:10 -14:40 Coffee break & posters
14:40 - 16:00 Session 4:
14:40-15:00 Guoquan (Paul) Huang
15:00-15:20 Maani Ghaffari
15:20-15:40 Camillo J. Taylor
15:40-15:50 Closing remarks
Call for papers/posters/videos:
We cordially invite researchers to submit short papers, extended abstracts, posters, and/or videos. We accept original papers, as well as in-review or accepted manuscripts. Submitted contributions can describe work in progress, preliminary results, novel concepts, or industrial applications.
All manuscripts are limited to 4+n pages (i.e., additional pages over 4 are ONLY allowed for references), should use the IEEE standard two-column conference format (paper template available on the IEEE ICRA 2022 website), and must be in the PDF format with size less than 20 MB. We encourage authors to submit a video for their manuscript as supplementary material. All video submissions must have the mp4 format with a size less than 100 MB.
All original submissions will be peer-reviewed. Authors who submit a paper are expected to provide (up to) 3 single-blind reviews for the papers submitted to this workshop. Submissions will be selected by workshop organizers based on the reviews, their originality, relevance to the workshop topics, contributions, technical clarity, and presentation. All accepted manuscripts will be presented as posters during the workshop, which will be displayed throughout the day. Two top contributions will be selected for 10-minute oral presentations at spotlight sessions. Accepted posters and videos will be posted on the workshop website. You can contact the corresponding organizer with any questions: Mr. Kaveh Fathian, [email protected].
Topics of interest:
Machine learning methods, algorithmic techniques, and their synergy for robotic perception and mapping
Multi-agent, distributed, and/or asynchronous methods for mapping and structure from motion
Perception-based robotic navigation and planning
Methods based on synergetic mathematical and learned models
Certifiable and risk-aware perception, localization, and mapping
Filter-based estimation, statistical techniques, and uncertainty-aware methods
Factor graphs, pose graphs, rotation/translation averaging, and graph-based optimization techniques
Point cloud, mesh-based, and occupancy maps
Semantic segmentation, object detection, and pose estimation
Perception algorithms for autonomous ground, air, and underwater vehicles, bipedal robots, and industrial applications
Submission platform:
To submit your contributions please follow:
https://cmt3.research.microsoft.com/ROPM2022
You will need to create a new account if you have not used Microsoft CMT before.
Important dates:
Submission Deadline: Sunday, April 24, 2022, 8:00 PM EDT
Reviews due: Tuesday, May 03, 2022, 7:00 PM EDT
Acceptance Notification: Monday, May 9, 2022
Camera-ready submission: Sunday, May 15, 2022, 7:00 PM EDT
Workshop: Monday, May 23, 2022
Location: Room 119 AB, Pennsylvania Convention Center
Accepted papers & Poster:
Organizers & Committee:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA
University of Kentucky, USA
University of California, Los Angeles, USA