Yu-Shun Hsiao

RO
4papers
90citations
Novelty51%
AI Score27

4 Papers

LGMar 14, 2022
FRL-FI: Transient Fault Analysis for Federated Reinforcement Learning-Based Navigation Systems

Zishen Wan, Aqeel Anwar, Abdulrahman Mahmoud et al.

Swarm intelligence is being increasingly deployed in autonomous systems, such as drones and unmanned vehicles. Federated reinforcement learning (FRL), a key swarm intelligence paradigm where agents interact with their own environments and cooperatively learn a consensus policy while preserving privacy, has recently shown potential advantages and gained popularity. However, transient faults are increasing in the hardware system with continuous technology node scaling and can pose threats to FRL systems. Meanwhile, conventional redundancy-based protection methods are challenging to deploy on resource-constrained edge applications. In this paper, we experimentally evaluate the fault tolerance of FRL navigation systems at various scales with respect to fault models, fault locations, learning algorithms, layer types, communication intervals, and data types at both training and inference stages. We further propose two cost-effective fault detection and recovery techniques that can achieve up to 3.3x improvement in resilience with <2.7% overhead in FRL systems.

AIMay 6, 2022
Zhuyi: Perception Processing Rate Estimation for Safety in Autonomous Vehicles

Yu-Shun Hsiao, Siva Kumar Sastry Hari, Michał Filipiuk et al.

The processing requirement of autonomous vehicles (AVs) for high-accuracy perception in complex scenarios can exceed the resources offered by the in-vehicle computer, degrading safety and comfort. This paper proposes a sensor frame processing rate (FPR) estimation model, Zhuyi, that quantifies the minimum safe FPR continuously in a driving scenario. Zhuyi can be employed post-deployment as an online safety check and to prioritize work. Experiments conducted using a multi-camera state-of-the-art industry AV system show that Zhuyi's estimated FPRs are conservative, yet the system can maintain safety by processing only 36% or fewer frames compared to a default 30-FPR system in the tested scenarios.

ROMay 27, 2021Code
MAVFI: An End-to-End Fault Analysis Framework with Anomaly Detection and Recovery for Micro Aerial Vehicles

Yu-Shun Hsiao, Zishen Wan, Tianyu Jia et al.

Safety and resilience are critical for autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs). We introduce MAVFI, the micro aerial vehicles (MAVs) resilience analysis methodology to assess the effect of silent data corruption (SDC) on UAVs' mission metrics, such as flight time and success rate, for accurately measuring system resilience. To enhance the safety and resilience of robot systems bound by size, weight, and power (SWaP), we offer two low-overhead anomaly-based SDC detection and recovery algorithms based on Gaussian statistical models and autoencoder neural networks. Our anomaly error protection techniques are validated in numerous simulated environments. We demonstrate that the autoencoder-based technique can recover up to all failure cases in our studied scenarios with a computational overhead of no more than 0.0062%. Our application-aware resilience analysis framework, MAVFI, can be utilized to comprehensively test the resilience of other Robot Operating System (ROS)-based applications and is publicly available at https://github.com/harvard-edge/MAVBench/tree/mavfi.

RONov 9, 2021
Analyzing and Improving Fault Tolerance of Learning-Based Navigation Systems

Zishen Wan, Aqeel Anwar, Yu-Shun Hsiao et al.

Learning-based navigation systems are widely used in autonomous applications, such as robotics, unmanned vehicles and drones. Specialized hardware accelerators have been proposed for high-performance and energy-efficiency for such navigational tasks. However, transient and permanent faults are increasing in hardware systems and can catastrophically violate tasks safety. Meanwhile, traditional redundancy-based protection methods are challenging to deploy on resource-constrained edge applications. In this paper, we experimentally evaluate the resilience of navigation systems with respect to algorithms, fault models and data types from both RL training and inference. We further propose two efficient fault mitigation techniques that achieve 2x success rate and 39% quality-of-flight improvement in learning-based navigation systems.