Tinoosh Mohsenin

LG
h-index30
29papers
331citations
Novelty43%
AI Score49

29 Papers

ROAug 17, 2023
ReProHRL: Towards Multi-Goal Navigation in the Real World using Hierarchical Agents

Tejaswini Manjunath, Mozhgan Navardi, Prakhar Dixit et al.

Robots have been successfully used to perform tasks with high precision. In real-world environments with sparse rewards and multiple goals, learning is still a major challenge and Reinforcement Learning (RL) algorithms fail to learn good policies. Training in simulation environments and then fine-tuning in the real world is a common approach. However, adapting to the real-world setting is a challenge. In this paper, we present a method named Ready for Production Hierarchical RL (ReProHRL) that divides tasks with hierarchical multi-goal navigation guided by reinforcement learning. We also use object detectors as a pre-processing step to learn multi-goal navigation and transfer it to the real world. Empirical results show that the proposed ReProHRL method outperforms the state-of-the-art baseline in simulation and real-world environments in terms of both training time and performance. Although both methods achieve a 100% success rate in a simple environment for single goal-based navigation, in a more complex environment and multi-goal setting, the proposed method outperforms the baseline by 18% and 5%, respectively. For the real-world implementation and proof of concept demonstration, we deploy the proposed method on a nano-drone named Crazyflie with a front camera to perform multi-goal navigation experiments.

LGNov 9, 2023
LLM Augmented Hierarchical Agents

Bharat Prakash, Tim Oates, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Solving long-horizon, temporally-extended tasks using Reinforcement Learning (RL) is challenging, compounded by the common practice of learning without prior knowledge (or tabula rasa learning). Humans can generate and execute plans with temporally-extended actions and quickly learn to perform new tasks because we almost never solve problems from scratch. We want autonomous agents to have this same ability. Recently, LLMs have been shown to encode a tremendous amount of knowledge about the world and to perform impressive in-context learning and reasoning. However, using LLMs to solve real world problems is hard because they are not grounded in the current task. In this paper we exploit the planning capabilities of LLMs while using RL to provide learning from the environment, resulting in a hierarchical agent that uses LLMs to solve long-horizon tasks. Instead of completely relying on LLMs, they guide a high-level policy, making learning significantly more sample efficient. This approach is evaluated in simulation environments such as MiniGrid, SkillHack, and Crafter, and on a real robot arm in block manipulation tasks. We show that agents trained using our approach outperform other baselines methods and, once trained, don't need access to LLMs during deployment.

LGOct 16, 2022
Towards an Interpretable Hierarchical Agent Framework using Semantic Goals

Bharat Prakash, Nicholas Waytowich, Tim Oates et al.

Learning to solve long horizon temporally extended tasks with reinforcement learning has been a challenge for several years now. We believe that it is important to leverage both the hierarchical structure of complex tasks and to use expert supervision whenever possible to solve such tasks. This work introduces an interpretable hierarchical agent framework by combining planning and semantic goal directed reinforcement learning. We assume access to certain spatial and haptic predicates and construct a simple and powerful semantic goal space. These semantic goal representations are more interpretable, making expert supervision and intervention easier. They also eliminate the need to write complex, dense reward functions thereby reducing human engineering effort. We evaluate our framework on a robotic block manipulation task and show that it performs better than other methods, including both sparse and dense reward functions. We also suggest some next steps and discuss how this framework makes interaction and collaboration with humans easier.

63.2ROMar 19
Embodied Foundation Models at the Edge: A Survey of Deployment Constraints and Mitigation Strategies

Utkarsh Grover, Ravi Ranjan, Mingyang Mao et al.

Deploying foundation models in embodied edge systems is fundamentally a systems problem, not just a problem of model compression. Real-time control must operate within strict size, weight, and power constraints, where memory traffic, compute latency, timing variability, and safety margins interact directly. The Deployment Gauntlet organizes these constraints into eight coupled barriers that determine whether embodied foundation models can run reliably in practice. Across representative edge workloads, autoregressive Vision-Language-Action policies are constrained primarily by memory bandwidth, whereas diffusion-based controllers are limited more by compute latency and sustained execution cost. Reliable deployment therefore depends on system-level co-design across memory, scheduling, communication, and model architecture, including decompositions that separate fast control from slower semantic reasoning.

LGNov 2, 2022
Harnessing the Power of Explanations for Incremental Training: A LIME-Based Approach

Arnab Neelim Mazumder, Niall Lyons, Ashutosh Pandey et al.

Explainability of neural network prediction is essential to understand feature importance and gain interpretable insight into neural network performance. However, explanations of neural network outcomes are mostly limited to visualization, and there is scarce work that looks to use these explanations as feedback to improve model performance. In this work, model explanations are fed back to the feed-forward training to help the model generalize better. To this extent, a custom weighted loss where the weights are generated by considering the Euclidean distances between true LIME (Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations) explanations and model-predicted LIME explanations is proposed. Also, in practical training scenarios, developing a solution that can help the model learn sequentially without losing information on previous data distribution is imperative due to the unavailability of all the training data at once. Thus, the framework incorporates the custom weighted loss with Elastic Weight Consolidation (EWC) to maintain performance in sequential testing sets. The proposed custom training procedure results in a consistent enhancement of accuracy ranging from 0.5% to 1.5% throughout all phases of the incremental learning setup compared to traditional loss-based training methods for the keyword spotting task using the Google Speech Commands dataset.

3.1CVApr 11
SatReg: Regression-based Neural Architecture Search for Lightweight Satellite Image Segmentation

Edward Humes, Tinoosh Mohsenin

As Earth-observation workloads move toward onboard and edge processing, remote-sensing segmentation models must operate under tight latency and energy constraints. We present SatReg, a regression-based hardware-aware tuning framework for lightweight remote-sensing segmentation on edge platforms. Using CM-UNet as the teacher architecture, we reduce the search space to two dominant width-related variables, profile a small set of student models on an NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano, and fit low-order surrogate models for mIoU, latency, and power. Knowledge distillation is used to efficiently train the sampled students. The learned surrogates enable fast selection of near-optimal architecture settings for deployment targets without exhaustive search. Results show that the selected variables affect task accuracy and hardware cost differently, making reduced-space regression a practical strategy for adapting hybrid CNN-Mamba segmentation models to future space-edge systems.

50.1ROMar 10
OA-NBV: Occlusion-Aware Next-Best-View Planning for Human-Centered Active Perception on Mobile Robots

Boxun Hu, Chang Chang, Jiawei Ge et al.

We naturally step sideways or lean to see around the obstacle when our view is blocked, and recover a more informative observation. Enabling robots to make the same kind of viewpoint choice is critical for human-centered operations, including search, triage, and disaster response, where cluttered environments and partial visibility frequently degrade downstream perception. However, many Next-Best-View (NBV) methods primarily optimize generic exploration or long-horizon coverage, and do not explicitly target the immediate goal of obtaining a single usable observation of a partially occluded person under real motion constraints. We present Occlusion-Aware Next-Best-View Planning for Human-Centered Active Perception on Mobile Robots (OA-NBV), an occlusion-aware NBV pipeline that autonomously selects the next traversable viewpoint to obtain a more complete view of an occluded human. OA-NBV integrates perception and motion planning by scoring candidate viewpoints using a target-centric visibility model that accounts for occlusion, target scale, and target completeness, while restricting candidates to feasible robot poses. OA-NBV achieves over 90% success rate in both simulation and real-world trials, while baseline NBV methods degrade sharply under occlusion. Beyond success rate, OA-NBV improves observation quality: compared to the strongest baseline, it increases normalized target area by at least 81% and keypoint visibility by at least 58% across settings, making it a drop-in view-selection module for diverse human-centered downstream tasks.

AIMay 29, 2025Code
Multi-RAG: A Multimodal Retrieval-Augmented Generation System for Adaptive Video Understanding

Mingyang Mao, Mariela M. Perez-Cabarcas, Utteja Kallakuri et al.

To effectively engage in human society, the ability to adapt, filter information, and make informed decisions in ever-changing situations is critical. As robots and intelligent agents become more integrated into human life, there is a growing opportunity-and need-to offload the cognitive burden on humans to these systems, particularly in dynamic, information-rich scenarios. To fill this critical need, we present Multi-RAG, a multimodal retrieval-augmented generation system designed to provide adaptive assistance to humans in information-intensive circumstances. Our system aims to improve situational understanding and reduce cognitive load by integrating and reasoning over multi-source information streams, including video, audio, and text. As an enabling step toward long-term human-robot partnerships, Multi-RAG explores how multimodal information understanding can serve as a foundation for adaptive robotic assistance in dynamic, human-centered situations. To evaluate its capability in a realistic human-assistance proxy task, we benchmarked Multi-RAG on the MMBench-Video dataset, a challenging multimodal video understanding benchmark. Our system achieves superior performance compared to existing open-source video large language models (Video-LLMs) and large vision-language models (LVLMs), while utilizing fewer resources and less input data. The results demonstrate Multi- RAG's potential as a practical and efficient foundation for future human-robot adaptive assistance systems in dynamic, real-world contexts.

CVDec 18, 2023
Squeezed Edge YOLO: Onboard Object Detection on Edge Devices

Edward Humes, Mozhgan Navardi, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Demand for efficient onboard object detection is increasing due to its key role in autonomous navigation. However, deploying object detection models such as YOLO on resource constrained edge devices is challenging due to the high computational requirements of such models. In this paper, an compressed object detection model named Squeezed Edge YOLO is examined. This model is compressed and optimized to kilobytes of parameters in order to fit onboard such edge devices. To evaluate Squeezed Edge YOLO, two use cases - human and shape detection - are used to show the model accuracy and performance. Moreover, the model is deployed onboard a GAP8 processor with 8 RISC-V cores and an NVIDIA Jetson Nano with 4GB of memory. Experimental results show Squeezed Edge YOLO model size is optimized by a factor of 8x which leads to 76% improvements in energy efficiency and 3.3x faster throughout.

CVApr 4, 2024
TinyVQA: Compact Multimodal Deep Neural Network for Visual Question Answering on Resource-Constrained Devices

Hasib-Al Rashid, Argho Sarkar, Aryya Gangopadhyay et al.

Traditional machine learning models often require powerful hardware, making them unsuitable for deployment on resource-limited devices. Tiny Machine Learning (tinyML) has emerged as a promising approach for running machine learning models on these devices, but integrating multiple data modalities into tinyML models still remains a challenge due to increased complexity, latency, and power consumption. This paper proposes TinyVQA, a novel multimodal deep neural network for visual question answering tasks that can be deployed on resource-constrained tinyML hardware. TinyVQA leverages a supervised attention-based model to learn how to answer questions about images using both vision and language modalities. Distilled knowledge from the supervised attention-based VQA model trains the memory aware compact TinyVQA model and low bit-width quantization technique is employed to further compress the model for deployment on tinyML devices. The TinyVQA model was evaluated on the FloodNet dataset, which is used for post-disaster damage assessment. The compact model achieved an accuracy of 79.5%, demonstrating the effectiveness of TinyVQA for real-world applications. Additionally, the model was deployed on a Crazyflie 2.0 drone, equipped with an AI deck and GAP8 microprocessor. The TinyVQA model achieved low latencies of 56 ms and consumes 693 mW power while deployed on the tiny drone, showcasing its suitability for resource-constrained embedded systems.

LGMay 20, 2024
TinyM$^2$Net-V3: Memory-Aware Compressed Multimodal Deep Neural Networks for Sustainable Edge Deployment

Hasib-Al Rashid, Tinoosh Mohsenin

The advancement of sophisticated artificial intelligence (AI) algorithms has led to a notable increase in energy usage and carbon dioxide emissions, intensifying concerns about climate change. This growing problem has brought the environmental sustainability of AI technologies to the forefront, especially as they expand across various sectors. In response to these challenges, there is an urgent need for the development of sustainable AI solutions. These solutions must focus on energy-efficient embedded systems that are capable of handling diverse data types even in environments with limited resources, thereby ensuring both technological progress and environmental responsibility. Integrating complementary multimodal data into tiny machine learning models for edge devices is challenging due to increased complexity, latency, and power consumption. This work introduces TinyM$^2$Net-V3, a system that processes different modalities of complementary data, designs deep neural network (DNN) models, and employs model compression techniques including knowledge distillation and low bit-width quantization with memory-aware considerations to fit models within lower memory hierarchy levels, reducing latency and enhancing energy efficiency on resource-constrained devices. We evaluated TinyM$^2$Net-V3 in two multimodal case studies: COVID-19 detection using cough, speech, and breathing audios, and pose classification from depth and thermal images. With tiny inference models (6 KB and 58 KB), we achieved 92.95% and 90.7% accuracies, respectively. Our tiny machine learning models, deployed on resource limited hardware, demonstrated low latencies within milliseconds and very high power efficiency.

ROApr 15, 2025
ATLASv2: LLM-Guided Adaptive Landmark Acquisition and Navigation on the Edge

Mikolaj Walczak, Uttej Kallakuri, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Autonomous systems deployed on edge devices face significant challenges, including resource constraints, real-time processing demands, and adapting to dynamic environments. This work introduces ATLASv2, a novel system that integrates a fine-tuned TinyLLM, real-time object detection, and efficient path planning to enable hierarchical, multi-task navigation and manipulation all on the edge device, Jetson Nano. ATLASv2 dynamically expands its navigable landmarks by detecting and localizing objects in the environment which are saved to its internal knowledge base to be used for future task execution. We evaluate ATLASv2 in real-world environments, including a handcrafted home and office setting constructed with diverse objects and landmarks. Results show that ATLASv2 effectively interprets natural language instructions, decomposes them into low-level actions, and executes tasks with high success rates. By leveraging generative AI in a fully on-board framework, ATLASv2 achieves optimized resource utilization with minimal prompting latency and power consumption, bridging the gap between simulated environments and real-world applications.

IVFeb 19, 2025
MambaLiteSR: Image Super-Resolution with Low-Rank Mamba using Knowledge Distillation

Romina Aalishah, Mozhgan Navardi, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) has gained significant attention in recent years, revolutionizing various applications across industries. Among these, advanced vision models for image super-resolution are in high demand, particularly for deployment on edge devices where real-time processing is crucial. However, deploying such models on edge devices is challenging due to limited computing power and memory. In this paper, we present MambaLiteSR, a novel lightweight image Super-Resolution (SR) model that utilizes the architecture of Vision Mamba. It integrates State Space Blocks and a reconstruction module for efficient feature extraction. To optimize efficiency without affecting performance, MambaLiteSR employs knowledge distillation to transfer key insights from a larger Mamba-based teacher model to a smaller student model via hyperparameter tuning. Through mathematical analysis of model parameters and their impact on PSNR, we identify key factors and adjust them accordingly. Our comprehensive evaluation shows that MambaLiteSR outperforms state-of-the-art edge SR methods by reducing power consumption while maintaining competitive PSNR and SSIM scores across benchmark datasets. It also reduces power usage during training via low-rank approximation. Moreover, MambaLiteSR reduces parameters with minimal performance loss, enabling efficient deployment of generative AI models on resource-constrained devices. Deployment on the embedded NVIDIA Jetson Orin Nano confirms the superior balance of MambaLiteSR size, latency, and efficiency. Experiments show that MambaLiteSR achieves performance comparable to both the baseline and other edge models while using 15% fewer parameters. It also improves power consumption by up to 58% compared to state-of-the-art SR edge models, all while maintaining low energy use during training.

ARNov 3, 2024
Energy-Aware FPGA Implementation of Spiking Neural Network with LIF Neurons

Asmer Hamid Ali, Mozhgan Navardi, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Tiny Machine Learning (TinyML) has become a growing field in on-device processing for Internet of Things (IoT) applications, capitalizing on AI algorithms that are optimized for their low complexity and energy efficiency. These algorithms are designed to minimize power and memory footprints, making them ideal for the constraints of IoT devices. Within this domain, Spiking Neural Networks (SNNs) stand out as a cutting-edge solution for TinyML, owning to their event-driven processing paradigm which offers an efficient method of handling dataflow. This paper presents a novel SNN architecture based on the 1st Order Leaky Integrate-and-Fire (LIF) neuron model to efficiently deploy vision-based ML algorithms on TinyML systems. A hardware-friendly LIF design is also proposed, and implemented on a Xilinx Artix-7 FPGA. To evaluate the proposed model, a collision avoidance dataset is considered as a case study. The proposed SNN model is compared to the state-of-the-art works and Binarized Convolutional Neural Network (BCNN) as a baseline. The results show the proposed approach is 86% more energy efficient than the baseline.

ROJun 3, 2025
EDEN: Entorhinal Driven Egocentric Navigation Toward Robotic Deployment

Mikolaj Walczak, Romina Aalishah, Wyatt Mackey et al.

Deep reinforcement learning agents are often fragile while humans remain adaptive and flexible to varying scenarios. To bridge this gap, we present EDEN, a biologically inspired navigation framework that integrates learned entorhinal-like grid cell representations and reinforcement learning to enable autonomous navigation. Inspired by the mammalian entorhinal-hippocampal system, EDEN allows agents to perform path integration and vector-based navigation using visual and motion sensor data. At the core of EDEN is a grid cell encoder that transforms egocentric motion into periodic spatial codes, producing low-dimensional, interpretable embeddings of position. To generate these activations from raw sensory input, we combine fiducial marker detections in the lightweight MiniWorld simulator and DINO-based visual features in the high-fidelity Gazebo simulator. These spatial representations serve as input to a policy trained with Proximal Policy Optimization (PPO), enabling dynamic, goal-directed navigation. We evaluate EDEN in both MiniWorld, for rapid prototyping, and Gazebo, which offers realistic physics and perception noise. Compared to baseline agents using raw state inputs (e.g., position, velocity) or standard convolutional image encoders, EDEN achieves a 99% success rate, within the simple scenarios, and >94% within complex floorplans with occluded paths with more efficient and reliable step-wise navigation. In addition, as a replacement of ground truth activations, we present a trainable Grid Cell encoder enabling the development of periodic grid-like patterns from vision and motion sensor data, emulating the development of such patterns within biological mammals. This work represents a step toward biologically grounded spatial intelligence in robotics, bridging neural navigation principles with reinforcement learning for scalable deployment.

LGJan 8, 2025
Decentralised Resource Sharing in TinyML: Wireless Bilayer Gossip Parallel SGD for Collaborative Learning

Ziyuan Bao, Eiman Kanjo, Soumya Banerjee et al.

With the growing computational capabilities of microcontroller units (MCUs), edge devices can now support machine learning models. However, deploying decentralised federated learning (DFL) on such devices presents key challenges, including intermittent connectivity, limited communication range, and dynamic network topologies. This paper proposes a novel framework, bilayer Gossip Decentralised Parallel Stochastic Gradient Descent (GD PSGD), designed to address these issues in resource-constrained environments. The framework incorporates a hierarchical communication structure using Distributed Kmeans (DKmeans) clustering for geographic grouping and a gossip protocol for efficient model aggregation across two layers: intra-cluster and inter-cluster. We evaluate the framework's performance against the Centralised Federated Learning (CFL) baseline using the MCUNet model on the CIFAR-10 dataset under IID and Non-IID conditions. Results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves comparable accuracy to CFL on IID datasets, requiring only 1.8 additional rounds for convergence. On Non-IID datasets, the accuracy loss remains under 8\% for moderate data imbalance. These findings highlight the framework's potential to support scalable and privacy-preserving learning on edge devices with minimal performance trade-offs.

CVMay 7, 2025
RAFT -- A Domain Adaptation Framework for RGB & LiDAR Semantic Segmentation

Edward Humes, Xiaomin Lin, Boxun Hu et al.

Image segmentation is a powerful computer vision technique for scene understanding. However, real-world deployment is stymied by the need for high-quality, meticulously labeled datasets. Synthetic data provides high-quality labels while reducing the need for manual data collection and annotation. However, deep neural networks trained on synthetic data often face the Syn2Real problem, leading to poor performance in real-world deployments. To mitigate the aforementioned gap in image segmentation, we propose RAFT, a novel framework for adapting image segmentation models using minimal labeled real-world data through data and feature augmentations, as well as active learning. To validate RAFT, we perform experiments on the synthetic-to-real "SYNTHIA->Cityscapes" and "GTAV->Cityscapes" benchmarks. We managed to surpass the previous state of the art, HALO. SYNTHIA->Cityscapes experiences an improvement in mIoU* upon domain adaptation of 2.1%/79.9%, and GTAV->Cityscapes experiences a 0.4%/78.2% improvement in mIoU. Furthermore, we test our approach on the real-to-real benchmark of "Cityscapes->ACDC", and again surpass HALO, with a gain in mIoU upon adaptation of 1.3%/73.2%. Finally, we examine the effect of the allocated annotation budget and various components of RAFT upon the final transfer mIoU.

LGFeb 9, 2022
TinyM$^2$Net: A Flexible System Algorithm Co-designed Multimodal Learning Framework for Tiny Devices

Hasib-Al Rashid, Pretom Roy Ovi, Carl Busart et al.

With the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI), new attention has been given to implement AI algorithms on resource constrained tiny devices to expand the application domain of IoT. Multimodal Learning has recently become very popular with the classification task due to its impressive performance for both image and audio event classification. This paper presents TinyM$^2$Net -- a flexible system algorithm co-designed multimodal learning framework for resource constrained tiny devices. The framework was designed to be evaluated on two different case-studies: COVID-19 detection from multimodal audio recordings and battle field object detection from multimodal images and audios. In order to compress the model to implement on tiny devices, substantial network architecture optimization and mixed precision quantization were performed (mixed 8-bit and 4-bit). TinyM$^2$Net shows that even a tiny multimodal learning model can improve the classification performance than that of any unimodal frameworks. The most compressed TinyM$^2$Net achieves 88.4% COVID-19 detection accuracy (14.5% improvement from unimodal base model) and 96.8% battle field object detection accuracy (3.9% improvement from unimodal base model). Finally, we test our TinyM$^2$Net models on a Raspberry Pi 4 to see how they perform when deployed to a resource constrained tiny device.

LGFeb 4, 2022
A Fast Network Exploration Strategy to Profile Low Energy Consumption for Keyword Spotting

Arnab Neelim Mazumder, Tinoosh Mohsenin

Keyword Spotting nowadays is an integral part of speech-oriented user interaction targeted for smart devices. To this extent, neural networks are extensively used for their flexibility and high accuracy. However, coming up with a suitable configuration for both accuracy requirements and hardware deployment is a challenge. We propose a regression-based network exploration technique that considers the scaling of the network filters ($s$) and quantization ($q$) of the network layers, leading to a friendly and energy-efficient configuration for FPGA hardware implementation. We experiment with different combinations of $\mathcal{NN}\scriptstyle\langle q,\,s\rangle \displaystyle$ on the FPGA to profile the energy consumption of the deployed network so that the user can choose the most energy-efficient network configuration promptly. Our accelerator design is deployed on the Xilinx AC 701 platform and has at least 2.1$\times$ and 4$\times$ improvements on energy and energy efficiency results, respectively, compared to recent hardware implementations for keyword spotting.

AINov 7, 2021
Automatic Goal Generation using Dynamical Distance Learning

Bharat Prakash, Nicholas Waytowich, Tinoosh Mohsenin et al.

Reinforcement Learning (RL) agents can learn to solve complex sequential decision making tasks by interacting with the environment. However, sample efficiency remains a major challenge. In the field of multi-goal RL, where agents are required to reach multiple goals to solve complex tasks, improving sample efficiency can be especially challenging. On the other hand, humans or other biological agents learn such tasks in a much more strategic way, following a curriculum where tasks are sampled with increasing difficulty level in order to make gradual and efficient learning progress. In this work, we propose a method for automatic goal generation using a dynamical distance function (DDF) in a self-supervised fashion. DDF is a function which predicts the dynamical distance between any two states within a markov decision process (MDP). With this, we generate a curriculum of goals at the appropriate difficulty level to facilitate efficient learning throughout the training process. We evaluate this approach on several goal-conditioned robotic manipulation and navigation tasks, and show improvements in sample efficiency over a baseline method which only uses random goal sampling.

AIOct 9, 2021
Interactive Hierarchical Guidance using Language

Bharat Prakash, Nicholas Waytowich, Tim Oates et al.

Reinforcement learning has been successful in many tasks ranging from robotic control, games, energy management etc. In complex real world environments with sparse rewards and long task horizons, sample efficiency is still a major challenge. Most complex tasks can be easily decomposed into high-level planning and low level control. Therefore, it is important to enable agents to leverage the hierarchical structure and decompose bigger tasks into multiple smaller sub-tasks. We introduce an approach where we use language to specify sub-tasks and a high-level planner issues language commands to a low level controller. The low-level controller executes the sub-tasks based on the language commands. Our experiments show that this method is able to solve complex long horizon planning tasks with limited human supervision. Using language has added benefit of interpretability and ability for expert humans to take over the high-level planning task and provide language commands if necessary.

LGNov 26, 2020
Neural Networks for Pulmonary Disease Diagnosis using Auditory and Demographic Information

Morteza Hosseini, Haoran Ren, Hasib-Al Rashid et al.

Pulmonary diseases impact millions of lives globally and annually. The recent outbreak of the pandemic of the COVID-19, a novel pulmonary infection, has more than ever brought the attention of the research community to the machine-aided diagnosis of respiratory problems. This paper is thus an effort to exploit machine learning for classification of respiratory problems and proposes a framework that employs as much correlated information (auditory and demographic information in this work) as a dataset provides to increase the sensitivity and specificity of a diagnosing system. First, we use deep convolutional neural networks (DCNNs) to process and classify a publicly released pulmonary auditory dataset, and then we take advantage of the existing demographic information within the dataset and show that the accuracy of the pulmonary classification increases by 5% when trained on the auditory information in conjunction with the demographic information. Since the demographic data can be extracted using computer vision, we suggest using another parallel DCNN to estimate the demographic information of the subject under test visioned by the processing computer. Lastly, as a proposition to bring the healthcare system to users' fingertips, we measure deployment characteristics of the auditory DCNN model onto processing components of an NVIDIA TX2 development board.

IVJun 26, 2020
Diverse Knowledge Distillation (DKD): A Solution for Improving The Robustness of Ensemble Models Against Adversarial Attacks

Ali Mirzaeian, Jana Kosecka, Houman Homayoun et al.

This paper proposes an ensemble learning model that is resistant to adversarial attacks. To build resilience, we introduced a training process where each member learns a radically distinct latent space. Member models are added one at a time to the ensemble. Simultaneously, the loss function is regulated by a reverse knowledge distillation, forcing the new member to learn different features and map to a latent space safely distanced from those of existing members. We assessed the security and performance of the proposed solution on image classification tasks using CIFAR10 and MNIST datasets and showed security and performance improvement compared to the state of the art defense methods.

LGJan 16, 2020
Code-Bridged Classifier (CBC): A Low or Negative Overhead Defense for Making a CNN Classifier Robust Against Adversarial Attacks

Farnaz Behnia, Ali Mirzaeian, Mohammad Sabokrou et al.

In this paper, we propose Code-Bridged Classifier (CBC), a framework for making a Convolutional Neural Network (CNNs) robust against adversarial attacks without increasing or even by decreasing the overall models' computational complexity. More specifically, we propose a stacked encoder-convolutional model, in which the input image is first encoded by the encoder module of a denoising auto-encoder, and then the resulting latent representation (without being decoded) is fed to a reduced complexity CNN for image classification. We illustrate that this network not only is more robust to adversarial examples but also has a significantly lower computational complexity when compared to the prior art defenses.

LGSep 29, 2019
Learning from Observations Using a Single Video Demonstration and Human Feedback

Sunil Gandhi, Tim Oates, Tinoosh Mohsenin et al.

In this paper, we present a method for learning from video demonstrations by using human feedback to construct a mapping between the standard representation of the agent and the visual representation of the demonstration. In this way, we leverage the advantages of both these representations, i.e., we learn the policy using standard state representations, but are able to specify the expected behavior using video demonstration. We train an autonomous agent using a single video demonstration and use human feedback (using numerical similarity rating) to map the standard representation to the visual representation with a neural network. We show the effectiveness of our method by teaching a hopper agent in the MuJoCo to perform a backflip using a single video demonstration generated in MuJoCo as well as from a real-world YouTube video of a person performing a backflip. Additionally, we show that our method can transfer to new tasks, such as hopping, with very little human feedback.

LGMar 25, 2019
On the use of Deep Autoencoders for Efficient Embedded Reinforcement Learning

Bharat Prakash, Mark Horton, Nicholas R. Waytowich et al.

In autonomous embedded systems, it is often vital to reduce the amount of actions taken in the real world and energy required to learn a policy. Training reinforcement learning agents from high dimensional image representations can be very expensive and time consuming. Autoencoders are deep neural network used to compress high dimensional data such as pixelated images into small latent representations. This compression model is vital to efficiently learn policies, especially when learning on embedded systems. We have implemented this model on the NVIDIA Jetson TX2 embedded GPU, and evaluated the power consumption, throughput, and energy consumption of the autoencoders for various CPU/GPU core combinations, frequencies, and model parameters. Additionally, we have shown the reconstructions generated by the autoencoder to analyze the quality of the generated compressed representation and also the performance of the reinforcement learning agent. Finally, we have presented an assessment of the viability of training these models on embedded systems and their usefulness in developing autonomous policies. Using autoencoders, we were able to achieve 4-5 $\times$ improved performance compared to a baseline RL agent with a convolutional feature extractor, while using less than 2W of power.

AIMar 22, 2019
Improving Safety in Reinforcement Learning Using Model-Based Architectures and Human Intervention

Bharat Prakash, Mohit Khatwani, Nicholas Waytowich et al.

Recent progress in AI and Reinforcement learning has shown great success in solving complex problems with high dimensional state spaces. However, most of these successes have been primarily in simulated environments where failure is of little or no consequence. Most real-world applications, however, require training solutions that are safe to operate as catastrophic failures are inadmissible especially when there is human interaction involved. Currently, Safe RL systems use human oversight during training and exploration in order to make sure the RL agent does not go into a catastrophic state. These methods require a large amount of human labor and it is very difficult to scale up. We present a hybrid method for reducing the human intervention time by combining model-based approaches and training a supervised learner to improve sample efficiency while also ensuring safety. We evaluate these methods on various grid-world environments using both standard and visual representations and show that our approach achieves better performance in terms of sample efficiency, number of catastrophic states reached as well as overall task performance compared to traditional model-free approaches

CVAug 28, 2017
Deep Belief Networks used on High Resolution Multichannel Electroencephalography Data for Seizure Detection

JT Turner, Adam Page, Tinoosh Mohsenin et al.

Ubiquitous bio-sensing for personalized health monitoring is slowly becoming a reality with the increasing availability of small, diverse, robust, high fidelity sensors. This oncoming flood of data begs the question of how we will extract useful information from it. In this paper we explore the use of a variety of representations and machine learning algorithms applied to the task of seizure detection in high resolution, multichannel EEG data. We explore classification accuracy, computational complexity and memory requirements with a view toward understanding which approaches are most suitable for such tasks as the number of people involved and the amount of data they produce grows to be quite large. In particular, we show that layered learning approaches such as Deep Belief Networks excel along these dimensions.

LGDec 19, 2014
Detecting Epileptic Seizures from EEG Data using Neural Networks

Siddharth Pramod, Adam Page, Tinoosh Mohsenin et al.

We explore the use of neural networks trained with dropout in predicting epileptic seizures from electroencephalographic data (scalp EEG). The input to the neural network is a 126 feature vector containing 9 features for each of the 14 EEG channels obtained over 1-second, non-overlapping windows. The models in our experiments achieved high sensitivity and specificity on patient records not used in the training process. This is demonstrated using leave-one-out-cross-validation across patient records, where we hold out one patient's record as the test set and use all other patients' records for training; repeating this procedure for all patients in the database.