Zhaoyang Shen

2papers

2 Papers

87.0ROMar 22
ArtiSG: Functional 3D Scene Graph Construction via Human-demonstrated Articulated Objects Manipulation

Qiuyi Gu, Yuze Sheng, Jincheng Yu et al.

3D scene graphs have empowered robots with semantic understanding for navigation and planning. However, current functional scene graphs primarily focus on static element detection, lacking the actionable kinematic information required for physical manipulation, particularly regarding articulated objects. Existing approaches for inferring articulation mechanisms from static observations are prone to visual ambiguity, while methods that estimate parameters from state changes typically rely on constrained settings such as fixed cameras and unobstructed views. Furthermore, inconspicuous functional elements like hidden handles are frequently missed by pure visual perception. To bridge this gap, we present ArtiSG, a framework that constructs functional 3D scene graphs by encoding human demonstrations into structured robotic memory. Our approach leverages a robust data collection pipeline utilizing a portable hardware setup to accurately track 6-DoF manipulation trajectories and estimate articulation axes, even under camera ego-motion. By integrating these kinematic priors into a hierarchical, open-vocabulary graph, our system not only models how articulated objects move but also utilizes physical interaction data to discover implicit elements. Extensive real-world experiments demonstrate that ArtiSG significantly outperforms baselines in functional element recall and articulation estimation precision. Moreover, we show that the constructed graph serves as a reliable robotic memory, effectively guiding robots to perform language-directed manipulation tasks in real-world environments containing diverse articulated objects.

SPJan 10, 2021
Machine Learning for Electronic Design Automation: A Survey

Guyue Huang, Jingbo Hu, Yifan He et al.

With the down-scaling of CMOS technology, the design complexity of very large-scale integrated (VLSI) is increasing. Although the application of machine learning (ML) techniques in electronic design automation (EDA) can trace its history back to the 90s, the recent breakthrough of ML and the increasing complexity of EDA tasks have aroused more interests in incorporating ML to solve EDA tasks. In this paper, we present a comprehensive review of existing ML for EDA studies, organized following the EDA hierarchy.